The ‘Three Pillars’ of Carbon Reduction, According to Caltrans

The California Department of Transportation released its draft carbon reduction strategy last month to apply for Carbon Reduction Program funds included in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. Road pricing plays a prominent role.

3 minute read

August 9, 2023, 10:00 AM PDT

By Irvin Dawid


Close-up of Caltrans logo on white passenger train

MichaelVi / Adobe Stock

On April 21, 2022, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA)'s Office of Planning, Environment, and Realty released a 16-page ‘implementation guidance’ [pdf] document for one of the climate programs included in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act administered by FHWA.

The purpose of the Carbon Reduction Program (CRP) is to reduce transportation emissions through the development of State carbon reduction strategies and by funding projects designed to reduce transportation emissions.

Related in Planetizen on the CRP:

And on reducing transportation emissions on the federal level:

California's application

The program provides roughly $1.25B to $1.33 billion per fiscal year for five years. California's department of transportation, Caltrans, in partnership with the state’s metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs), developed a draft Carbon Reduction Strategy (CRS), the source article [pdf] for this post, to submit to the Federal Highway Administration for approval by November 2023, according to an older Caltrans webpage.

California's CRS focuses on the “Three Pillars:” zero-emission vehicles (ZEVs) and infrastructure, active transportation, and rail and transit. All CRP funds must be spent in support of the Three Pillars, according to the updated Caltrans CRP webpage.

Not by ZEVs alone

“Although transitioning to electric and hydrogen vehicle technologies is critical to carbon reduction, the CARB Scoping Plan is clear that California cannot achieve carbon neutrality with ZEVs alone,” states the strategy on pg. 4 under the sub-heading, Reducing Transportation’s Carbon Emissions.

Related: 

Even with California’s mandate that all new car sales be ZEVs beginning in 2035, many vehicles will still have traditional internal combustion engines. To achieve carbon neutrality, Californians need to drive less: 25 percent below 2019 levels by 2030 and 30 percent below 2019 levels by 2045.

Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT) reduction

The last page of the 19-page report,describes a fourth carbon reduction strategy: Roadway Pricing.

California will use its State CRP funding on projects that convert existing highway lanes into priced managed lanes. Roadway pricing--including Express and High Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes, congestion pricing, and toll roads and bridges- -are critical to achieving carbon neutrality by 2045. The CARB Scoping Plan estimates that between 27% and 37% of the VMT reduction needed to reach carbon neutrality will come from roadway pricing

“California’s State CRP funds will be programmed through the State Highway Operations and Protection Program (SHOPP) on projects that convert existing lanes to priced managed lanes,” according to Caltrans. What's not clear, though, is what type of “existing lanes” Caltrans is referring to – general purpose or High Occupancy Vehicle lanes.

Hat tip to Steve Birdlebough, Sierra Club California Transportation and Sustainable Communities committee.

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