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The Travel and Emissions Impacts of Telecommuting for the State of California Telecommuting Pilot Project

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Author Info
Dennis Henderson (University of California, Davis)
Brett Koenig (Systems Applications International)
Patricia Mohktarian (University of California, Davis)

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Abstract

The impacts of home-based telecommuting on travel behavior and personal vehicle emissions for participants in the State of California Telecommuting Pilot Project are analyzed using the most advanced emissions modeling tools currently available. A comparison of participants' telecommuting day travel behavior with their before-telecommuting behavior shows a 27% reduction in the number of personal vehicle trips, a 77% decrease in vehicle-miles traveled (VMT), and 39% (and 4%) decreases in the number of cold (and hot) engine starts. These decreases in travel translate into emissions reductions of: 48% for total organic gases (TOG), 64% for carbon monoxide (CO), 69% for nitrogen oxide (NOx), and 78% for particulate matter (PM). Although the authors developed the methodology to investigate the emissions impacts of telecommuting, the analysis technique can be applied to any demand management or other transportation strategy where all of the necessary model inputs are available. An analysis of the number of personal vehicle trips and VMT partitioned into commute-related and non-commute-related purposes revealed that non-commute personal vehicle trips increased by 0.5 trips per person-day on average, whereas the non-commute VMT decreased by 5.3 miles. This important finding supports (for one indicator, the number of trips) the hypothesis that non-commute travel generation is a potential negative impact of telecommuting. This finding demonstrates the need to monitor these changes as telecommuting moves into the mainstream. In this study, however, the small increase in non-commute trips has a negligible impact compared to the overall travel and emissions savings.

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Publisher Info
Paper provided by Institute of Transportation Studies, UC Davis in its series Institute of Transportation Studies, Working Paper Series with number UCD-ITS-REP-96-06.

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Date of creation: 01 Feb 1996
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Handle: RePEc:cdl:itsdav:ucd-its-rep-96-06

Note: oai:cdlib1:itsdavis-1052
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Postal: 2028 Academic Surge, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616
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Web page: http://repositories.cdlib.org/itsdavis/
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Related research
Keywords: telecommuting; emissions; california; travel; behavior;

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References listed on IDEAS
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  1. Susan Handy & Ilan Salomon & Patricia Mokhtarian, 1995. "Methodological Issues in the Estimation of the Travel, Energy, and Air Quality Impacts of Telecommuting," Institute of Transportation Studies, Working Paper Series UCD-ITS-REP-95-38, Institute of Transportation Studies, UC Davis. [Downloadable!]
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Cited by:
(explanations, Please report citation or reference errors to , or , if you are the registered author of the cited work, log in to your RePEc Author Service profile, click on "citations" and make appropriate adjustments.)

  1. Walls, Margaret & Safirova, Elena, 2004. "A Review of the Literature on Telecommuting and Its Implications for Vehicle Travel and Emissions," Discussion Papers dp-04-44, Resources For the Future. [Downloadable!]
  2. Margaret Walls & Peter Nelson & Elena Safirova, 2005. "Telecommuting and environmental policy - lessons from the Ecommute program," ERSA conference papers ersa05p801, European Regional Science Association. [Downloadable!]
  3. Krishna Varma & Patricia Mokhtarian, 1998. "The Trade-Off Between Trips and Distance Traveled in Analyzing the Emissions Impacts of Center-Based Telecommuting," Institute of Transportation Studies, Working Paper Series UCD-ITS-REP-98-16, Institute of Transportation Studies, UC Davis. [Downloadable!]
  4. Dennis Henderson & Patricia Mohktarian, 1996. "Impacts of Center-Based Telecommuting on Travel and Emissions: Analysis of the Puget Sound Demonstration Project," Institute of Transportation Studies, Working Paper Series UCD-ITS-REP-96-08, Institute of Transportation Studies, UC Davis. [Downloadable!]
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