Raleigh suburbs are big carbon polluters
Blame the suburban lifestyle: The Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill area of North Carolina is a real hotspot when it comes to transportation-related carbon emissions.
The Center for Neighborhood Technology has released a new series of GIS-based maps showing where carbon emissions from driving are the highest. While emissions on a per-acre basis are greatest in highly urbanized areas, the suburbs and outlying areas pollute the most on a per-household basis due to the driving-intensive way of life.
CNT looked at emissions of carbon dioxide attributed to household vehicle travel in 55 metro areas, including the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill region. Measuring those emissions on a per-household basis, it found that the transportation-related emissions of people living in cities and other compact neighborhoods can be almost 70 percent less than for suburban households.
In North Carolina's Triangle region, the lowest carbon emissions on a household basis are found inside Raleigh's Beltline, and in the center of Durham and Chapel Hill, as illustrated on this CNT map:

"If you’re deciding where to live, consider moving to an urban area," says CNT President Scott Bernstein. "You’ll help fight global warming by emitting less CO2. And you’re likely to drive less, so you’ll spend less on transportation, saving up to $5,000 annually."
Labels: global warming, greenhouse gas pollution, suburban sprawl, transportation
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