Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

news

Cyclists pollute more than cars, claims Swiss economist; Scary HGV close pass video sparks cycling infra debate; Why can’t all cyclist v driver clips be like this? Cyclist hits van and apologises; Arty bike stand divides opinion + more on the live blog

It’s Tuesday and Ryan Mallon is back in the hot seat for all your live blog needs
15 November 2022, 11:32
Cows_on_the_Wherryman's_Way_-_geograph.org_.uk_-_1468176
Cyclists pollute more than cars, claims Swiss economist (and something about beef)

Cyclists can be up to four times more damaging to the environment than cars… because of beef and milk, apparently.

Well, at least that’s the view of Professor Reiner Eichenberger, a specialist in fiscal and economic policy at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland.

“Today everything is climate. Many want to replace the car with public transport and bicycles. They believe that the latter burden society less and are climate-friendly. That’s wrong,” Professor Eichenberger, widely credited as one of Switzerland’s most influential economists, claimed in a column for the weekly German-language Swiss newspaper Handelszeitung.

In the, shall we say, intriguing column, Eichenberger goes on to claim that, according to figures from the Swiss Office for Spatial Development and the Federal Statistical Office, when it comes to noise, accidents, infrastructure and operating costs, public transport and cycling “cost many times more than the car”.

Even when the official stats suggest that people using public transport and bikes are more beneficial to the environment than motorist, Eichenberger argues this is “largely due” to the organisations’ “creative accounting” and “official tricks”.

So, how do cyclists harm the environment and impact climate change more than cars? Well, you see, it’s all down to beef (and not the kind typically found on the live blog comments section).

The economist writes:

Although the whole debate is about energy and climate, the bicycle is treated as a perpetual motion machine. But cyclists need additional energy. For this, they have to eat more, which puts a strain on the climate.

Economical cars need 5 litres of gasoline per 100 kilometres, causing 12kg of CO2 emissions, i.e. 120 grams per vehicle kilometre – and 30 grams per passenger kilometre for a four-person occupation.

Cyclists consume around 2500 kilocalories (kcal) per 100 kilometres during normal riding. They have to compensate for energy and muscle consumption through additional food intake. So, they would need about 1 kilo of beef for the 2500 kcal. This causes them to produce 13.3kg of CO2.

Meat-eating cyclists therefore cause 133 grams of CO2 per passenger-kilometre – four times the number of well-occupied cars. If they obtain driving energy from milk, they emit 35 grams of CO2 per passenger-kilometre, which is still almost 20 percent more than the car. Unfortunately, this miserable record also applies to vegans.

So, there you have it. Unless you’re propelled solely by noodles – which, the helpful professor points out, will lead to protein deficiency at some point – you’re harming the environment on your bike more than the queue of traffic on the way home from work.

The comments section for this one was particularly amusing, with some readers describing the article as a “laughing stock” and an “embarrassment”.

“Joggers and hikers are even worse than cyclists, because they need more food (due to the inefficient locomotion) per 100km. Pedestrians are the climate killers par excellence,” wrote one astute reader.

“A ‘professor for financial and economic policy’ who writes such rubbish shakes my belief in the Swiss education system. Or is this supposed to be (moderately funny) satire?”

I think he may be on to something there (or at least I hope so).

Over on Twitter, meanwhile, one user got to the heart of the matter: “Bike consumption: 1 kg of beef/100 km. How many cattle does a Miguel Induráin have on his conscience?”

The question that keeps me awake at night…

15 November 2022, 17:49
‘By that logic, body builders must be more damaging to the environment than nuclear meltdowns’: Reaction to Swiss professor’s ‘cyclists pollute more than cars’ theory

Professor Reiner Eichenberger’s theory that cyclists pollute more than cars – based on something to do with cows, I think – has baffled quite a few of our readers.

BalladOfStruth gamely tried to suss it all out, to no avail:

So, let me get this straight – to arrive at these numbers, he’s:

  • Based his consumption-per-kilometre figures on what a cyclist would eat to fuel a long endurance ride and applied this to shorter rides where most cyclists wouldn’t eat anything extra (I never used to eat extra calories to fuel my commutes, despite his numbers assuming I’d need 200g of beef per day).
  • Based his figures on cyclists only eating just about the most inefficient and highest carbon-emitting food we are capable of creating (farmed beef). It looks like he has a pop at vegans too but doesn’t seem to quantify this with any numbers.
  • Ignored the fact that drivers will, in fact, also eat.
  • Compared cyclists only with “well occupied” cars, when we all know that most aren’t.
  • Compared cyclists only with “economical cars”, when many aren’t.
  • Ignored all other factors in running a car (waste products, fossil fuel production, manufacturing the vehicle, etc).

By his logic, body-builders must be more damaging to the environment than nuclear meltdowns. What utter, utter nonsense.

JustTryingToGet… also thought that the Swiss economist’s methodology needs a bit of work:

The numbers need to be re-run based on 1kg of cake.

Now there’s a study I could get behind…

15 November 2022, 09:55
HGV close pass in Balham (credit -Bill Hulley, Twitter)
“I don’t think the wand was stopping them”: Scary HGV close pass video sparks debate on safe infrastructure, dangerous driving, and “discourteous” cycling

When is cycling infrastructure not actually cycling infrastructure?

When a lorry driver can plough straight over the top of the traffic wands and into the bike lane, probably.

The above video, captured by cyclist Bill Hulley as he rode through Balham, south London, at the weekend, depicts quite a few hairy moments in just 40 seconds.

First, Bill narrowly squeezes between the overtaking HGV driver and a van protruding into the cycle lane from an adjoining road, before the lorry driver begins to veer into the bike lane, making light work of the light segregation in place by knocking over the wands like it was a game of Mario Kart.

“Could we have some kerbs on CS7 please?” Bill tweeted. “The wands are helpful but aren’t very good at deflecting HGVs.”

The rather frightening clip naturally prompted a debate on Twitter, about both the driving on display and the usefulness (or otherwise) of lightly segregated cycling infrastructure:

Local Labour councillor, active travel campaigner and live blog regular Jo Rigby – who has previously highlighted that paint does not necessarily equal infrastructure – responded to Bill’s clip by tweeting that “this is why I support the use of wands to protect Tooting and Battersea residents”.

Though some weren’t convinced:

Meanwhile, some Twitter users (both cyclists and motorists, it has to be said) preferred not to focus on the need for properly segregated bike lanes or the bowling alley-style driving on display, but instead chose to blast the cyclist’s “discourteous” riding (some stronger words may have been used):

And finally... 

15 November 2022, 14:54
Why can’t all cyclist vs driver clips be like this? Footage of cyclist apologising to motorist for hitting van goes viral

This clip is almost two months old, but has come on to our radar this week after the Sun shared it with the always fun and not-at-all-infuriating headline, “Watch as a cyclist smashes into the back of a van – nobody can believe how the men handle it”.

@norfolkdashcam The Van Driver was fine about the situation. No dramas. #Accident #Cyclist #Cycle #Van #Norfolk #NorfolkDashCam #UKRoads #DashCamFootage #DashCam #UKDashCam #CaughtOnCamera #Fail #CyclistsOfTiktok ♬ original sound - Norfolk Dash Cam

The video – posted on TikTok (which explains why we haven’t seen it) by the Norfolk Dash Cam account – depicts a cyclist exhibiting a lack of attention while riding through King’s Lynn and hitting the back of a van in the process. ‘Smashes’ may be overplaying the incident slightly, but hey, it’s the Sun.

After the bump, the cyclist then rides up to the van driver’s window to explain what had happened and apologise.

The motorist then – drumroll, please – replies: “Don’t worry, that’s alright.”

The extremely apologetic cyclist, perhaps surprised by the driver’s nonchalant response, continues to explain that he “slipped forward on my handlebars”, much to the chagrin of the motorists stopped behind the van, who sounded their displeasure through that age-old medium, the car horn.

Most of the TikTok users commenting on the video praised the decent, patient, and I would almost say human, interaction between the two road users, with one writing that it was “so nice he owned up to it” and that there was “no damage done” in any case.

However, as is always the case with these things, other users decided to have a go as anti-cycling bingo callers, with one writing (with more than a hint of sarcasm, I suspect), “No doubt the cyclist has insurance to pay for any damages anyway.”

“They need insurance if they’re gunna use the roads”, “Cyclist insurance details pls lol”, and “This is why cyclists should have to have insurance!” came some of the other original responses to the video.

Filling out the rest of the bingo card, one TikTok user – failing to distinguish between a bit of metal and an actual human being – said, “Now, if it been the van touching the cyclist…”

“One in a million. A cyclist that apologises,” another wrote.

Ah, you can’t win them all, can you?

15 November 2022, 16:57
Stupid things motorists say about cyclists, part 653: ‘I’m not saying you should run people down…’
15 November 2022, 16:30
Surface 604 Element electric fat bike - riding
Dutch cycling organisation concerned about rising popularity of electric fat bikes

Dutch Cyclists’ Union Fietsersbond, which campaigns for the expansion and improvement of cycling infrastructure in the Netherlands, has expressed its concerns about the growth in popularity of electric ‘fat bikes’ in the country.

According to Fietsersbond’s Ester van Garderen, electric bikes with fat tyres have surged in popularity since the Netherlands made helmets mandatory for scooter users. Van Garderen told the Telegraaf that the bikes can also be easily fitted with an illegal throttle lever that can increase their maximum speed from 25kph to 50kph.

They drive very fast,” Van Garderen said. “And you don’t hear them coming because of the electric drive.”

The Telegraaf has linked the popularity of these enhanced e-bikes among teenagers to the surge in serious cycling incidents involving young people aged between 12 and 17 in recent years.

The Fietsersbond says it has received several complaints from concerned road users about the fat bikes. “And rightly so, because don’t forget that about 600 people die in traffic every year,” Van Garderen added. “People aged 60 and older hardly dare to use the bicycle path anymore.”

15 November 2022, 15:36
Lachlan Morton - Photo Credit Grubers 06
Lachlan Morton set to target Mark Beaumont’s round-the-world record

Lachlan Morton, the Australian currently redefining what it means to be a professional cyclist, is not beginning to turn his attention towards possibly his biggest two-wheeled adventure yet: breaking Mark Beaumont’s round-the-world record.

Scottish endurance cyclist Beaumont set the current Guinness world record in 2017, when he circumnavigated the globe by bike (covering 29,000km) in just 79 days, despite a strong headwind and a crash in the Pyrenees slowing his progress as he neared his final destination, Paris.

> Mark Beaumont completes round-the-world ride in 79 days to smash Guinness World Record

EF Education-EasyPost pro Morton is, of course, no stranger to epic, long-distance rides. In March, he cycled over 1,000km non-stop from Munich to Poland’s border with Ukraine to raise funds for refugees fleeing the war-torn country.

The year before, the Australian rode the entire route of the Tour de France, including transfers, solo and unsupported – and even sometimes in crocs.

> Data reveals huge strain of Lachlan Morton’s solo Alt Tour vs. EF-Education Nippo’s Tour de France efforts

Now, his EF team boss Jonathan Vaughters – who has also encouraged Morton to take part in the fledgling gravel scene – has told Cycling Weekly that the next big aim will be to break Beaumont’s record, though it may have to wait until 2024.

“What we wanted to do was to try the around the world record [in the second half of 2023], but the sticking point on that right now is Russia,” Vaughters said.

“We don’t think that’s going to be possible next year, so we’re trying to come up with a plan B right now. What that is, we’re not sure yet.”

Lachlan Morton - Photo Credit Grubers 05

While JV maintains that Morton remains “very keen” to break the round-the-world record, the current geopolitical situation means that a proper crack at gravel racing will will constitute his main goal for 2023.

“He won’t be doing any road races, really,” Vaughters said. “In the early part of the year he wants to get away from doing real ultra events and kind of focus on trying to win in gravel.

“He has lost a lot of his explosive power from doing these massive 4,000km events. So, he’s training a little bit more in an explosive manner.”

Morton confirmed to Cycling Weekly that he had spoken with the team about a proposed round-the-world attempt, though there was “nothing concrete” yet.

15 November 2022, 14:14
One for the scrapbook
15 November 2022, 12:43
Tickets for the Dublin round of the UCI Cyclocross World Cup on sale now

With Wout van Aert reportedly set to confirm that he will be making the trip to Ireland next month, you definitely won’t want to miss this one…

15 November 2022, 12:23
Toto Tuesday

Come for the close pass videos, stay for the 2000s-era pro cycling nostalgia…

Ah, Toto Commesso, everyone’s favourite goateed, sleeveless noughties cult hero.

Does anyone else remember the brilliant ‘As the Toto Turns’ comic strip created by the US cycling website NYVelocity and featured briefly in Cycle Sport magazine?

Just me then? Well, you missed out...

15 November 2022, 10:55
“The problem with Britain’s road culture in a snapshot”

More cycling-related ‘art’ for you this morning on the blog:

15 November 2022, 10:19
“Beautiful” or “bloody useless”? New bike stand divides opinion

This, ahem, interesting new bike stand at the KARST contemporary art gallery in Plymouth (flagged by road.cc reader hirsute in the comments section of yesterday’s live blog) has certainly divided opinion online:

What do you think? A contemporary art masterpiece or a prime example of form over function?

Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

Add new comment

173 comments

Avatar
ktache | 1 year ago
1 like

We would be viewed as monsters, but would getting all of those calories from veal rather than beef be more green. I'm not advocating white veal, of course,ethically produced British rose veal.

It's almost a waste product from the dairy industry.

Not quite as tasty, but very tender.

Lot of waste boy calves needed to get those ladies milking.

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to ktache | 1 year ago
1 like

Hang about - you're not going to riff this into "A modest proposal" RE: the cost of living are you?

I think rich_cb is veggie or vegan (?) - hope you're not being provocative!

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to chrisonabike | 1 year ago
2 likes

I try and eat very little meat but am not vege etc.

I'm fully in agreement with Ktache though, if we're going to eat meat it makes sense to eat meat with a low marginal CO2 cost. Veal as a byproduct of the dairy industry is a good example but the best is probably culled venison.

Wild venison chilli con carne is superb.

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
1 like

For some reason I thought you were - don't know why.  Anyway happy to help out by eating venison (I also don't eat much meat).  Us folks here in Scotland could certainly eat more deer given that it's being culled!  And likely e.g. farmed rabbit, fresh sea food etc.  I'd definitely find it difficult to give up cheese though.  I did once by fiat once living in a country with no tradition of dairy product use until recently - discovered that it was important then!  I have trained myself to use soy milk though.  (Does that make me part of the wokerati?)

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to chrisonabike | 1 year ago
3 likes

chrisonatrike wrote:

I have trained myself to use soy milk though.

But what are the baby soys going to drink?

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
0 likes

I still don't understand soy milk.  As the song says - how do you milk a bean?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHBFnx7P8GM

Avatar
brooksby replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
1 like

Rich_cb wrote:

I try and eat very little meat but am not vege etc. I'm fully in agreement with Ktache though, if we're going to eat meat it makes sense to eat meat with a low marginal CO2 cost. Veal as a byproduct of the dairy industry is a good example but the best is probably culled venison. Wild venison chilli con carne is superb.

I had a kangaroo meat burger, years ago.  In the UK.  In hindsight, I dread to think what the carbon footprint of that (very tasty) burger was...

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
4 likes

brooksby wrote:

I had a kangaroo meat burger, years ago.  In the UK.  In hindsight, I dread to think what the carbon footprint of that (very tasty) burger was...

Kangaroos are considered pests, so I doubt that it was farmed which should help with its carbon footprint. Mrs HawkinsPeter tried kangaroo once whilst in Australia (she found it a bit tough), but I guess that flying over to Australia is far worse in terms of CO2 than getting a steak shipped to the UK (to be fair, we didn't go over there just to try a steak).

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
1 like

If it was shipped it probably wouldn't be too bad. Shipping is surprisingly low carbon on a per kg basis.

If it was flown it would be awful.

On that note, out of season Asparagus (air freighted from Peru) is IIRC the worst food from a CO2 per calorie perspective.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
0 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

If it was shipped it probably wouldn't be too bad. Shipping is surprisingly low carbon on a per kg basis. If it was flown it would be awful. On that note, out of season Asparagus (air freighted from Peru) is IIRC the worst food from a CO2 per calorie perspective.

How about celery? That's often considered to have negative calories when you factor in the chewing.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
1 like

That's a good point.

To save the planet we'll all have to stop chewing our celery.

Avatar
BalladOfStruth replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
0 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

That's a good point. To save the planet we'll all have to stop chewing our celery.

Luckily enough, I consume all of mine Intravenously.

Avatar
andystow replied to ktache | 1 year ago
2 likes

To ethically eat meat, if all vertebrate lives matter equally, we should minimize the deaths per pound of meat. Therefore, we should only eat blue wales, or barring that, elephants.

At 100,000 kg, the meat of one blue whale would easily supply two cyclists for their entire lives with the required two kilos of meat per day to commute.

We'd need big deep freezers, though.

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to andystow | 1 year ago
3 likes

How do you feel about parasitism?  Don't need to eat the whale all at once, you could just take small chunks like a cookiecutter shark.

Not as unlikely as it sounds as several human cultures have used animals for literal vampirism (e.g. as renewable supplies of blood).

Avatar
Gus T | 1 year ago
0 likes

100 km on 5 litres of fuel, that's 76 miles to the gallon, what car has that level of fuel economy. He's an economist, says it all.

Avatar
Hirsute replied to Gus T | 1 year ago
1 like

I make it 56 which might be achieved on a longer trip constant speed. But would make more sense to use a typical journey of up to 5 miles for comparison.
 

Avatar
marmotte27 | 1 year ago
3 likes

Cycling is by far the most energy efficient form of transport. So there are no extra calories being consumed.
Whose pocket is this shit-stirring Swiss professer living in?

Avatar
ShutTheFrontDawes replied to marmotte27 | 1 year ago
4 likes

Cycling as a form of exercise does consume calories. A human burns more calories when cycling than at rest, that's just a fact. However, that's pretty much the only part of the economist's analysis that holds water - which I find pretty indicative of the accuracy (or more to the point, the lack of accuracy) of economic analysis.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to marmotte27 | 1 year ago
0 likes

Is it?

From a carbon perspective you're probably better off taking certain forms of public transport than cycling.

Just looking at trip emissions you may even be better off sharing a car for some trips too.

Avatar
BalladOfStruth replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
2 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

Just looking at trip emissions you may even be better off sharing a car for some trips too.

But that's the problem, looking at just trip emissions (and I'm somewhat dubious of those numbers), you're ignoring all of the externalities that absolutley contribute to the carbon footprint of driving.

E: and as pointed out in the main blog - walking is less efficient in calorie use than cycling, so if you honestly think that cycling five miles is worse for the environment than driving five miles, then you must also think that walking five miles is worse than both? C'mon, really?

Avatar
Hirsute replied to BalladOfStruth | 1 year ago
1 like

Not just that, the 12kg is just for burning fuel so that is being compared with the footprint of food production ignoring the footprint of fuel production and delivery.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to BalladOfStruth | 1 year ago
0 likes

It depends on how you look at it.

Driving a car yourself for a short trip will never be less carbon intensive than walking/cycling.

Sharing a trip is a different matter.

If a vehicle is already travelling where you want to go then the marginal cost of carrying an extra passenger is minimal in carbon terms.

Eg Carbon cost of a 10km journey in a car is x kg CO2.
Carbon cost of same journey with an additional passenger is y kg CO2 the marginal cost of catching that lift is y-x. This is likely to be very low even for a car. For a train it's going to be absolutely tiny.

Most of the calculations simply divide the entire x by number of passengers which isn't always appropriate.

Avatar
BalladOfStruth replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
0 likes

This is all true. However, you'd then need to consider whether the car trip has to be a car trip (and the whole argument sort of relies on that assumption) - if not, you should be comparing four people on bikes going 10km vs four people in an car of "average fuel efficiency". Otherwise, what you're doing is saying that the only one who has any significant carbon footprint is the driver who has decided to make the trip by car, and the three passengers are almost irrelevant. Then, the only way you're making the comparison favour the car is by ignoring the driver and comparing the cyclist to one of the passengers. I think that's maybe a little disingenuous.

In your example, say you want to go the park and you spot a car with three people in it being driven to the park (that, for some reason has to be a car journey), so you flag it down and jump in. In this case, you're right in saying that the weight of the extra passenger has a minimal effect on carbon emissions (though whether this is less than cycling the same trip depends on the car - you can't just assume, as the professor has done, that the car in question is unreasonably fuel efficient compared to the average car).

However, this is a somewhat far-fetched example. In reality, it's going to be four people who have made the joint-decision to take the car. In this case, you have to consider whether the journey has to be made by car. Then, you are dividing the "x" number by the number of occupants (along with all of the other externalities of the car - you can't count the production/transport of the cyclist's fuel and ignore the production/transport of the car's fuel, you have to consider the impact of the car existing in the first place compared to the bike), and compare this to the four of them cycling to the park instead.

I think the above is a case of altering the scenario (or at least being a little selective with its variables) to make it fit the hypothesis, and to do so, you’d have to remove any resemblance to how these things work in reality.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to BalladOfStruth | 1 year ago
0 likes

I do agree but I don't think the necessity of the car journey is that relevant.

What matters is that the car journey will take place regardless of what you, as a potential passenger in said car, decide to do.

The CO2 cost of your journey is therefore marginal and worked out in comparison to the cost of the journey taking place without you. In that way it's directly comparable with public transport.

If there is public transport running in the direction you want to go the marginal CO2 cost of cycling will always be higher than the marginal CO2 cost of taking the already running transport.

For a car it will depend on the efficiency of the car but it would have to be a pretty inefficient car to have a higher marginal CO2 cost.

Whilst dietary choice will impact marginal cost of cycling I doubt even the most carbon efficient diet could compete with public transport marginal costs.

Avatar
BalladOfStruth replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
3 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

I do agree but I don't think the necessity of the car journey is that relevant.

I think this is the sticking point where we're probably not going to agree.

The comparison (in my opinion) is car vs bicycle. That is, is it better for four people to cycle than share even an economical car (spoiler: yes). The comparison you're making is car vs car AND bicycle, which is a different story, because it relies on a car journey (that, for some reason must be a car journey) going exactly where you want, when you want, full of people that don't mind you just randomly hopping in, and it still ignores the externalities of driving, fuel production, ect. This isn't (in my opinion) a real-world scenario. Also, the whole point of the "we should cycle more, it's better for the environment" argument is to reduce the amount of these car journeys that would be happaning anyway.

I think this is re-framing the argument in a way that's unfair to the bike, because what I'm saying is it's better to have four million bike trips instead of one million car trips (which is true), and what you're saying is it's worse to have one million bike trips as well as one million car trips (which is probably also true - though it sort of depends on the diet discussion we had earlier).

Your argument does map better to public transport, but there are still other considerations to be made - Public transport journeys aren't A-to-B, they're A-to-Z (I don't live anywhere near a bus stop now, but in my old village, a trip to town wasn't a 2 mile bike ride vs a 2 mile bus trip, it was a 2 mile bike ride vs 10 mile bus trip). Public transport are less efficient vehicles - yes they are often shared between many people and this brings overall efficiency to be much better than private cars, but they're often not full, so you have to consider the impact of an old deisel bus driving around with nobody on it, and there are still the other externalities of driving. 

I think we'll probably have to agree to disagree on this one, but I'll concede that you've made good arguments on the dietary impact of cycling, and that cycle journeys do have a larger carbon footprint than many assume.

 

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to BalladOfStruth | 1 year ago
1 like

I would disagree that it's an unlikely scenario.

If you work somewhere pretty big it's quite likely there will the opportunity to share a ride to and from work. This has certainly been the case for me many times.

In that situation the marginal cost is the main focus.

I do think agreeing to disagree is probably the best outcome here though. Thanks for an interesting discussion.

Avatar
BalladOfStruth replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
1 like

Rich_cb wrote:

I would disagree that it's an unlikely scenario.

It's not impossible, but as others have pointed out, the average car occupncy in the UK is 1.5 people. So, generally speaking, it's not guaranteed for a car to have two people in it, let alone four.

Going back to my "trip to the park" example, the argument is based on "adding" a cycle journey to a car journey that would be happening anyway - in which case the "marginal cost" of the cyclist hopping in the car is negligable (providing that you view the carbon footprint as being "owned" by the driver, and the three passengers being marginal additions - which I'm not sure I'm on board with). When viewed this way, it makes the cycle ride look like a bad choice, environmentally speaking. However, the reality of the stiuation is that the cycle ride is likely to replace one of four seperate car journeys.

Statistically speaking, cycle rides in the UK are likely to entirely replace single-occupancy car journeys, and that (I think) is where we're disagreeing. You made another comment talking about personal costs vs aggregate, systemic costs which I agree with 100%. I think you're arguing the "personal" side ("I'm just going to hop in this car that's already going where I want, the driver's creating the carbon cost, I'm just along for the ride"), and I'm arguing the "systemic" side ("it's better to replace that car with two bikes").

But it has been an interesting discussion, and if anything, we've proven that (contrary to what some say) people can disagree respectfully on this site.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to BalladOfStruth | 1 year ago
0 likes

If you look at the modal share of transport in Amsterdam whilst cycling appears to have displaced a lot of car journeys relative to other major cities it has also displaced quite a bit of public transport by the same comparison. Example Vs London below.

Cordial disagreement indeed!

Avatar
HoarseMann replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
1 like

Ah, but what if you're a cyclist who powers themselves by foraging for berries, nuts and road kill?

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to HoarseMann | 1 year ago
1 like

The marginal CO2 cost of road kill and foraging is probably negative so you can cycle to your heart's content.

Pages

Latest Comments