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Transportation

Germany's 9-Euro Train Tickets Scheme 'Saved 1.8 Million Tons of CO2 Emissions' (theguardian.com) 177

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Germany's three-month experiment with 9-euro tickets for a month's unlimited travel on regional train networks, trams and buses saved about 1.8 million tons of CO2 emissions, it has been claimed. Since its introduction on June 1 to cut fuel consumption and relieve a cost of living crisis, about 52 million tickets have been sold, a fifth of these to people who did not ordinarily use public transport. The scheme is due to end on Wednesday.

The Association of German Transport Companies (VDV), which carried out the research, said the number of people who switched from cars to public transport as a result of the 9-euro ticket was behind the saving in emissions. "The popularity of the 9-euro tickets had been unabated and the positive effect on it in tackling climate change is verifiable," the VDV said. It said the emissions saved were equivalent to the powering of 350,000 homes, and a similar drop would be seen over the period of a year if Germany introduced a speed limit on its motorways. A typical passenger vehicle emits about 4.6 tons of carbon a year. The scheme is also believed to have helped keep inflation, currently at about 8%, slightly lower than it otherwise would have been.
Additionally, the scheme "cut through swathes of complication ranging from myriad transport zones to ticket categories that differ greatly from region to region," reports The Guardian. "Just over 37% of people who bought the ticket used it to get to work, 50% used it for everyday journeys such as to go shopping or visit the doctor, 40% used it to visit people, and 33% used it for day trips."

"The government and regional administrations are under huge pressure to continue the ticket in some form. The expectation is that any replacement would be priced at least six times higher, but surveys show enthusiasm for such a scheme is high."
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Germany's 9-Euro Train Tickets Scheme 'Saved 1.8 Million Tons of CO2 Emissions'

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  • Berlin (Score:5, Informative)

    by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2022 @11:11PM (#62838495) Homepage
    It's awesome. I spent a couple of weeks in Berlin this summer and used cars/taxis zero times as a result. For as much as Germans complain about their trains I never had to wait more than 5 minutes and none of the trains were late by more than 30 seconds.
    • Berlin is a bad example for this because public transport was already great there before this ticket. The 9â ticket just made it a lot cheaper. Many people living there do not have a car because they do not need one. The main benefit is people using public transport instead of cars. And that happened quite often.
      • Berlin is a bad example for this because public transport was already great there before this ticket. The 9â ticket just made it a lot cheaper. Many people living there do not have a car because they do not need one. The main benefit is people using public transport instead of cars. And that happened quite often.

        I saw many people using it for going hiking, getting further outside the city than they normally would on a normal ticket. It definitely changed things during the vacation, not so sure how much it would change in everyday, because public transport is already faster and better than the mess that is the "major roads" of Berlin.

        • To the point of people going further than they normally would, I wonder if the estimated 1.8megatons of CO2 is a comparison to the historical norm for this month, or vs. if just as many people had traveled just as far but by car (which they wouldn't have).

          (Not that I'm against taking an efficiency dividend partly in reduced emissions but also in increased mobility.)

    • and a similar drop would be seen over the period of a year if Germany introduced a speed limit on its motorways.

      A... speed limit? SPEED LIMIT??!!? What's the point of having Germany if you can't go as fast as you want on the autobahns?

    • The trains have been so full like I have never seen before, but yes, it was awesome. I have visited so many small beautiful towns 200 km around Frankfurt/Main and instead of paying for the ticket I've been eating out there and spent time at the museums boosting the local economy a little.

    • by Tom ( 822 )

      You were in a city. Most german cities have good public transport and you can get from A to B by underground and bus faster than by car if there's any traffic on the road.

      Try the same in the countryside, where the bus leaves once an hour, if you are lucky, and twice a day if you're not. Where thousands of train stations have been closed over the past decades because they aren't profitable and where things like Uber or renting a scooter aren't a thing.

      That includes many small cities which are counted when yo

  • Spain (Score:5, Informative)

    by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Tuesday August 30, 2022 @11:29PM (#62838505) Homepage

    Here in Spain they just made all trains free until January.

    (apart from the luxury high-speed ones)

    • Here in Spain they just made all* trains free until January

      (apart from the luxury high-speed ones)

      *... for regular commuting, i.e., if you make at least 16 trips in the free period.

      • if you make at least 16 trips in the free period.

        The ticket requires a 10 Euro "deposit" which you lose if you don't make 16 trips.

        Even if you only make one return trip somewhere you're probably still ahead.

  • This is the way governments should work, provide a public service with a decent level of quality for a reasonable cost - even 6x or whatever they are talking about is very reasonable for what they provide.

    It does not eliminate car use but as the story shows, it provides a great alternative that a lot of people will take advantage of when it's easy enough to do so.

  • If we're serious about tackling climate change, public transportation has to be more seducing than car. Car is inherently more seducing, in individualist today age. Free/on time/clean public transport is a good way to compete against car.
    • There is nothing inherently more seducing about cars.

      It all depends on where you live and what time environment around you is like. If you live in most of America where almost everything is bent towards making cars the only option, then yes cars are much better than anything else, because everything else almost by design sucks.

      I don't live in America, and I don't own a car. I can certainly afford one, but all it would do is sit three losing money, doing nothing of use. For the few times a year one would be

      • There is nothing inherently more seducing about cars.

        Uhh.... Going from exactly where you live to exactly where you want to be in one go, with whatever personal things you installed to make the car yours, leaving when you want, not on a schedule, having the vehicle all for yourself, being able to turn on any music you like, ...

        Seriously, personal transport has tons of obvious benefits. Doesn't mean public transport shouldn't be better/the norm, but saying there isn't anything inherently more seducing sounds pretty silly...

        • There is nothing inherently more seducing about cars.

          Uhh.... Going from exactly where you live to exactly where you want to be in one go, with whatever personal things you installed to make the car yours, leaving when you want, not on a schedule, having the vehicle all for yourself, being able to turn on any music you like, ...

          And it only cost you $20,000!

      • by Saffaya ( 702234 )

        Maybe a look at China and its social system, soon coming to your country(tm), where you are forbidden to take the plane, to take the train, at the government's whim, will make you understand the value of a personally owned mean of tranportation?

         

        • Maybe a look at China and its social system, soon coming to your country(tm), where you are forbidden to take the plane, to take the train, at the government's whim, will make you understand the value of a personally owned mean of tranportation?

          Well, sadly, wait until all cars are "connected" together and "they" can not only track you, but control your car....

          If your social credit score drops too low...or maybe you make the wrong statement when drinking and twittering late at night, your ability to travel

    • Mostly cars are cheap because you don't pay many of the costs associated with it. The roads and parking are heavily subsidized. Most studies find that it is about $5K - $10K per year per car. The gas taxes don't cover that and raising them enough to cover it would cause people to be extremely upset. Far less than that could be spent on public transit to get the best system in the world.

      Even things like legally mandated parking minimums are subsidies to cars. Companies have to purchase expensive land far bey

      • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        No, a public transport system without roads would be orders of magnitude more expensive than the current cost of roads.
        You need to cover EVERYWHERE, if not with roads and buses then that means you would need to build rail lines absolutely everywhere. Rails also require considerably more space for turning etc, and a lot more planning to ensure that stationary trains don't block the line for other users.

        If buses are a part of your public transport system, then you still need roads to carry them.

        Not only does

  • Because suddenly all the plebes invaded their holiday spots that these unwashed masses couldn't afford going to before because going there for a day was too expensive and staying there wasn't really an option either for the same reason.

    • Err no. Sorry but while day tripping to destinations increased it was never something done by the "rich". Lower middle class maybe. Trains were never really expensive in Germany to begin with.

      • No, the rich could afford to drive up to Sylt and stay there for their vacation. But with the "practically free" train tickets, now Hartz IV (the German version of "social security, foot stamp level") recepients could now go there for a day, not spend a dime and leave again at night. And of course that didn't please the expensive holiday resorts one bit, because these "freeloaders" used their beaches without paying for their overpriced hotel rooms and restaurants.

        • I think there was just one piece of news in early June about "punks with dogs going to Sylt for Pentecost", but I don't think there was an actual invasion of poor people afterwards. At least 0 mention of that in German media.

          Also it's a problem that people like us conflate poor people with trouble makers. There are many things in life that can lead to poverty, and the "voluntarily poor" that people complain about (punks with dogs...) are a very small fraction of that population. Poor people are mostly singl

          • Poor people are, generally speaking, no trouble makers. It's not like they enjoy not having money and flaunt it. They just wanted to have a nice day at the beach, nothing else.

            The "problem" was rather the usual: Envy. The "rich" that spent a fortune on staying there were looking at the "poor" who had pretty much the same level of enjoyment "for free" and suddenly couldn't really enjoy their posh holiday anymore when they realized that they could have had the same, too, just for about 500 a day less.

          • Also it's a problem that people like us conflate poor people with trouble makers.

            Well, to play devils advocate...

            There is pretty much always higher crime associated with the poorer / poverty living areas.

            They tend to have MUCH more vandalism, graffiti, etc that you see in more affluent areas.

            And, it appears in this case, this type of behavior did indeed follow the poorer lot as they went to the more affluent areas for free.

      • While traveling by train isn't necessarily reserved for 'the rich', public transport *is* prohibitively expensive for large parts of the German population. To give an example, from the small German town where I currently live to the next bigger city it is 20 km (12 miles) by car, which is 3 € fuel (6 € return) with my old and not too economical car at the current extreme fuel prices, a modern economy car would reduce that to half (not even talking about EVs here). A single round-trip ticket by tra

        • A monthly commuter ticket costs â 140. That must be an extremley odd place.
          Can you post the names of the towns.

          I used to have monthly tickets from Karlsruhe to Stuttgart which is by train roughly 120km (I estimate), for 49 EURO.

          Your 20km trip makes no sense, not even the EURO 12,80 back and forth sound plausible, but I used to have a 50% reduction card, so no real idea about that.

  • https://www.tagesschau.de/wirt... [tagesschau.de]

    Seriously, the only way to get rid of this is electro plus solar, wind or nuclear.

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