It’s the best of times for climate policy in transportation: Despite some market fluctuations as companies scale up electric vehicle (EV) sales look to be up 35 percent globally this year, cheap EVs are suddenly everywhere, polluting diesel fuel use is at a 26-year low, and the US, China, and Europe all have ambitious electrification policies in place. Globally, one in five new cars was an EV in 2023 and EV truck sales are growing as billions flow into that market guided by strategic federal investments.
Sounds great, but here’s the rub: U.S. transportation carbon pollution is still the highest of any economic sector. Worse, they’re up over 18 percent from 1990 levels, have barely declined in years and might still increase. What’s wrong, and what can we do about it? The key is realizing that electrifying new cars and trucks takes a long time to move the needle because there are vastly more existing vehicles—and we have spent billions of dollars to make people dependent on driving those vehicles. As we celebrate historic progress on new vehicles this year, we have the chance to expand our focus to the whole transportation system and start making it work for everyone.
The bottom line is that, for decades, we’ve been working against ourselves on transportation pollution. Even as we have cleaned up individual vehicle engines, we have just kept adding vehicles to the system, slowing down or even swamping out those improvements. Now we have a chance to change course in ways that will both help the climate and repair communities. The result? Even as new engines have gotten cleaner (and even started to electrify), pollution still comes spewing out of millions of existing tailpipes as people are forced by bad transit, bad planning, and endless road building to make yet another trip to the gas station. If we want to accelerate climate action, we need to finally start investing in people, not pavement, and create a fair and affordable transportation system with real choices.
In this memo, we outline a path forward. We explain how we got into this fix, describe actionable policies states and the federal government need to start implementing right now to get us out of it, and how change can benefit all of us. For sure, it is time to free us all from the gas pump and tailpipe—but it is also time to knit back together communities divided by highways, stop futilely building new ones, and create walkable, bikeable, neighborhoods for everyone. Here’s how.
First: We Have to Stop Making the Problem Worse
One of the main reasons transportation pollution continues to increase is that, at all levels of government, we are continuing to invest in travel options that perpetuate an inequitable status quo. It’s imperative to restrain the unchecked expansion of the road/highway network to avoid significant increases in miles driven, carbon pollution, and the resulting local exposure to air pollution in surrounding communities. Because many transportation investment decisions are both made and implemented at the state level, state departments of transportation and the governors who oversee them are central to getting this right and achieving emissions reductions in the most heavily polluting sector of our economy.
In particular, states often invest in new roads and highways to reduce congestion and improve commute times. However, research increasingly demonstrates that roadway expansions often prompt “induced demand.” Essentially, new roads or expansions of existing roads often increase drivers’ interest in commuting using that same roadway. Any reduced congestion and improved travel time is almost always temporary, yet the increase in transportation pollution is not.
The transportation network in the United States also carries a legacy of profound dislocation and economic harm. In the middle of the last century, the construction of highways like I-81 in Syracuse caused whole communities to be systematically destroyed to make room for new roads. Moreover, these new highways often physically separated minority communities from the centers of the local economy.
Finally, the continued expansion of the road and highway network across the country continues to be a fiscal drag for states and local governments. The gas tax, traditionally used to fund road repairs, is a less and less dependable revenue source at both the state and federal levels, as gasoline-powered vehicles become more fuel-efficient and electric vehicle adoption continues to rapidly accelerate. Expanding existing highways and building new ones threatens to put a significant budgetary strain on communities nationwide.
Moreover, even as we increase electric vehicle deployment, much of the vehicle fleet will remain powered by fossil fuels, largely because most drivers tend to hang onto their vehicles for a decade or more. Giving people more options for getting where they need to go is both an investment in quality of life and affordability and an essential part of tackling the climate crisis.
The Sustainable Path Forward
Linking land use reforms to transportation investments
A key reason right now that so many people are dependent on their cars for getting to work and accessing basic necessities like food and medical services is that we’ve increasingly designed and planned our communities around cars, and developments are increasingly built further and further apart from one another. This adds pollution, expense, and lost time to everyday life.
Basic land use reforms to begin correcting for this unsustainable and cost-prohibitive paradigm can make a huge difference in reducing car trips and the multiple forms of pollution that they cause. According to analysis conducted by RMI, some of the most impactful reforms states and localities can implement to reduce people’s dependence on cars are: removing antiquated restrictions on multi-family housing in zoning codes, allowing for greater development closer to mass transit stations, and building housing on underutilized land. These interventions are also essential to generate more housing options broadly, combating our country’s growing housing affordability crisis in the process.
Making the most of transformative federal infrastructure investments
Within its transportation components, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) funds many promising climate mitigation initiatives (PDF), such as the $7.5 billion National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program (NEVI), the EPA’s $5 billion Clean School Bus Program, the $5.62 Low/No Emissions Bus Program administered by the Federal Transit Administration and the Secretary’s Reconnecting Communities Pilot. However, these programs (a combination of competitive and formula-based) are dwarfed by the historic amount of funding allocated to legacy federal formula programs (PDF) overseen by the Federal Highway Administration, cumulatively funded at roughly $300 billion.
States have an enormous amount of discretion in allocating formula funds. Broadly, state Departments of Transportation (DOT) have the authority to invest their formula dollars in new highway/road/bridge construction, or they can choose to focus on repairing existing facilities. The latter emphasis both saves money for the state and road users on maintenance, while also minimizing the growth in transportation emissions associated with highway investments. Choosing expansion leads to more drivers on the road and more expensive infrastructure for states to be saddled with maintaining in the future. Indeed, analysis from the Georgetown Climate Center conducted shortly after IIJA was enacted found that the manner in which states direct their formula funds could lead cumulative transportation emissions to either increase or decrease as a result of IIJA spending.
Examples of state authority and primacy
The two largest federal transportation formula programs are the National Highway Performance Program ($147 billion in IIJA funding) and the Surface Transportation Block Grant Program ($79 billion in IIJA funding). The NHPP is intended to fund improvements to the National Highway System and can be used to construct new facilities or repair existing ones. The IIJA also authorizes, but does not require, new eligibility for select resilience initiatives. STBG funding is even more flexible and can theoretically be used on any manner of surface transportation investments, including repair projects, broad transportation planning, electric vehicle infrastructure, mass transit, and pedestrian/cyclist improvements.
Additionally, states have the ability to “flex” a large portion of their federal highway dollars and transfer them to programs overseen instead by the Federal Transit Administration, to support mass transit investments directly or related transportation improvements (i.e., bicycle facilities adjacent to a train station).
Right now, though, too many states are not rising to the occasion in the way that we need. Even states long considered climate leaders, like California and New Jersey, are plowing ahead with reckless highway expansion projects that will only worsen the situation and leave us with a deeper hole to dig from if we are to bend the curve on ever-rising transportation pollution. The climate movement will have to mount a concerted effort to ensure that we’re maximizing the climate potential of IIJA. And both state leaders and the federal DOT should now be clear that flexing funds need to be poured into transit urgently; the federal government should partner with the states to channel funds to key transit networks, and be clear that this approach is not just an option—it’s essential.