The Greenbrier Companies Inc.

10/07/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/07/2024 11:57

20 Years of U.S. Transport Emissions

20 Years of U.S. Transport Emissions in One Graphic

According to theBureau of Transportation Statistics, in 2022, U.S. freight transport alone generated nearly 570 million metric tons of CO₂, a number that has been steadily growing for the last 20 years.

However, while all other transport types have increased emissions, rail freight transport has significantly decreased emissions over the same period.

For this graphic, Visual Capitalist partnered withThe Greenbrier Companies to investigate how rail significantly reduced emissions.

Growing Transport Emissions

The total volume of greenhouse gas emissions released by U.S. transport (shown below in millions of metric tons) has steadily grown over the last two decades. In fact, since 2002, U.S. freight emissions have grown by 17%.

Transport Mode 2002 2022 % Change
Trucking 357 411 15%
Pipelines 37 69 88%
Rail 41 32 -23%
Ships and Other Boats 31 36 18%
Aircraft 21 21 0%
Total 486 569 17%

While the cause of much of this growth has been the increased emissions generated by trucking, which grew by 15% to 411 million metric tons in 2022,emissions from shipping and pipelines also rose over the last two decades-18% and 88%, respectively.

However, at the same time, rail emissions dropped by 23% to 32 million metric tons. The rail industry made this possible by emphasizing fuel efficiency.

TheAmerican Association of Railroads reports that one train can move a metric ton of materials 500 miles on a single gallon of fuel. Additionally, when looking at overall energy use, rail only consumed 3%* of the totalenergy used by U.S. transport in 2022.

These and many other factors have led to U.S. rail freight contributing only 1.8% of the overall emissions produced by U.S. transport.