Tag Archives: transportation

Men Waste £2,000 in Fuel While Lost Because They Won’t Ask for Directions

Image: Google Maps 276 Extra Miles Per Year on Average According to a study by British insurer Sheilas’ Wheels (watch out for the bright pink website), men waste about £2,000 in fuel over their lifetime because they won’t ask for directions when they are lost, leading to an average of 276 extra miles being driven per year. Definitely not green…… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Men Waste £2,000 in Fuel While Lost Because They Won’t Ask for Directions

Toyota to Offer External Speaker Option to Make Prius Noisier in Japan

Image: Toyota WHIIIRRRRRR Toyota will be offering its Japanese customers an optional (for now) $150 device that makes its 3rd generation Prius hybrid easier to hear at low speeds. They call it the “Approaching Vehicle Audible System”, and it basically makes whirring sounds that vary in pitch with the speed of the car up to 25 kph (check out the video below)…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Toyota to Offer External Speaker Option to Make Prius Noisier in Japan

Straight from Germany, the Best Bike Shop EVER! (Photos)

Photo: Christine Lepisto Hey Boss! Where Should We Put All Those Bikes? A couple of photos of a building covered in bicycles started floating around the net a few days ago (I first saw them on Copenhagenize ). It’s a bike shop in Germany, and when I first saw the pics I thought “Best bike shop EVER!”, and I knew I had to learn more. Thanks to our amazing Berlin correspondent, I now have more photos and background info on this extremely clever way to advertise bikes. Check… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Straight from Germany, the Best Bike Shop EVER! (Photos)

Crossing Canada in 28 Days with an Electric Jellybean (aka i MiEV)

Image: Mitsubishi 28 Days to Cross the Country with Electricity Mitsubishi wanted to do a big PR stunt to market its i MiEV electric car, and Canada’s a big country. They put the two together and the i MiEV (it does kinda look like a jellybean) is en route to cross Canada in 28 days, stop numerous time to do a quick recharge and to show the car to journalists and enthusiasts in various cities. Read on for more details…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Crossing Canada in 28 Days with an Electric Jellybean (aka i MiEV)

Does Obama Really Support Sustainable Agriculture?

Image credit: The WHO Farm When Michelle Obama first announced her White House garden , locavores everywhere rejoiced. Here was a highly symbolic, yet practical, indication of where the administration stood on sustainable agriculture. Yet while the First Lady has since enlarged the White House garden , and even

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Does Obama Really Support Sustainable Agriculture?

Is the Electrification of Transportation a Good Thing? (Part 2)

Electric Cars are Coming – Is it a Good Thing? In part 1 , we looked at why it’s important to get our cars off oil and what the first part of that transition might look like. Today, we look at the next phase, the electrification of transportation. Is it a good thing? Why? Isn’t it just moving pollution around because of all those batteries and coal plants? Let’s have a look…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Is the Electrification of Transportation a Good Thing? (Part 2)

Dr. Frank Ryan’s Fatal Crash Reignites Texting-While-Driving Debate

‘It has stopped being an oddity when we hear that someone was texting and has a wreck,’ an emergency physician tells MTV News. By Mawuse Ziegbe Dr. Frank Ryan Photo: Frazer Harrison/ Getty Images In a case of multitasking gone horribly wrong, plastic surgeon Dr. Frank Ryan was apparently sending out a tweet before his car fell off a cliff Monday. The surgeon, best known for performing several surgeries on “The Hills” starlet Heidi Montag, was apparently typing about his border collie before his Jeep Wrangler plummeted from Malibu’s Pacific Coast Highway. The accident demonstrates the very real danger of texting or tweeting while driving, an activity that has reportedly spiked in recent years. “I hear, almost daily, accounts of people who are injured while texting,” said Dr. Angela Gardner, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians . Gardner, who is also an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, told MTV News that sometimes, linking an accident to texting is difficult if the phone is destroyed or tossed from the scene of the incident. However, Gardner did say texting-related accidents are becoming commonplace. “[There is] definitely an uptick and a noticeable one,” she said. “It has stopped being an oddity when we hear that someone was texting and has a wreck. Now it’s more of a fairly common occurrence.” While sending out a status update during a leisurely drive may seem innocuous, Gardner said it only takes a moment for distracted drivers to become vulnerable. “There’s two things [that can lead to accidents]: The obvious one is that one hand is off the wheel if you’re holding a phone. The other thing is that, as fast or as good as you are at texting, it still takes that microsecond of looking away from the road, and that microsecond is when accidents occur,” Gardner said. “The theory is that people look away for a minute, and then they realize the car is going off the road, and they jerk the car back. It’s the compensation movement that can cause a car to roll over.” Several states have laws in place curtailing cell phone use while driving, and many, including, where Ryan died, have outright bans on texting while on the road. A 2009 study by the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute revealed that truck drivers were more than 20 times as likely to be involved in a crash while texting. The study indicated that sending messages in particular was significantly more dangerous than dialing or talking on the phone. “People don’t realize — and it’s not just young people, it’s everyone with a cell phone — that moment that you look away from your phone is the moment it could take to have a wreck,” Gardner said. Gardner noted that people often have an “irresistible urge” to respond to a text or tweet but offered a straightforward suggestion for drivers who feel tempted to type while still on the road. “My advice is put the phone away,” Gardner said. “Put it in your pocket, put it in your purse. Put it away until you’re done with your trip.”

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Dr. Frank Ryan’s Fatal Crash Reignites Texting-While-Driving Debate

The Case for Open Data in Transit (Video)

Image credit: Streetfilms From showcasing Bogota’s revolutionary transit policies , to the search for the mythical ZoZo , the thing I have always liked about StreetFilms is their ability to move beyond individual examples of best practice, and use that as a forum to explore the big ideas behind better transit and better cities. Their latest offering is no exception—looking at what happens when transit authorities hand over the keys to t… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Case for Open Data in Transit (Video)

WaPo Wonders: How Can You Spend a Trillion Dollars with ‘Tangible Results’ and Be Doubted?

The front page of Saturday’s Washington Post carried an article by Shailagh Murray from Ohio’s 13th congressional district, just west of Cleveland. The dominant theme was two-term Rep. Betty Sutton’s whining that her GOP opponent Ted Ganley, a car dealer, benefited from Cash for Clunkers but now bashes it. The Post wondered about why Democrats get so little credit for the “stimulus,” and Murray’s central question was this: How can nearly $1 trillion flush through the U.S. economy, with tangible results, and still leave voters dubious? [“Flushed” is a good verb for this.] Some blame Obama and Democratic leaders in Congress for failing to set clear and realistic expectations… It proved difficult to keep track of all that spending, and the White House and Democratic leaders had a hard time showing how it was contributing to the recovery. “The branding and marketing was done very poorly,” said Alan Blinder, a Princeton University economist who supported the stimulus. “When you spend that much money, there should be more recognition.” About $2 billion of the stimulus money flowed to Sutton’s Ohio District. The funds are paying for 628 projects, making it one of the largest concentrations of federal spending in the Midwest. But when you look at the “tangible” Sutton results that the Post lists, even if you were local, you’d wonder if this is the “smart” way to create jobs — as opposed to pleasing a list of constituent groups: The list includes $400 million to replace the decrepit I nner Belt Bridge in suburban Cleveland and $25 million to expand a BASF Catalysts lithium-ion battery plant in Elyria. The Akron Urban League received $2 million to expand broadband Internet service to 3,500 users, creating 13 jobs. The town of Lorain secured $15,390 to retrofit seven school buses with pollution-control gear, and the Ohio Department of Transportation won a $2,500 grant to buy spare parts for the Brunswick municipal fleet. And the Car Allowance Rebate System, better known as Cash for Clunkers, lured customers into auto showrooms, staving off layoffs at the local Ford factory and its suppliers. Here’s how Murray began her Saturday article, complete with Mean GOP overtones: Republican House candidate Tom Ganley sold more than 800 cars last summer through the “Cash for Clunkers” government rebate program. But does Uncle Sam get a thank you? “Let’s talk about Cash for Clunkers,” the voluble millionaire, who owns the largest auto dealership group in Ohio, told a group of voters here recently. “It created a 30-day surge in auto sales. After it ended, there was no business. It was like the faucet was shut off.” As the nation struggled through a painful recession, the Democratic-led Congress rushed through nearly $1 trillion in spending and tax cuts, aiming to jump-start business investment, keep state and local governments afloat and put people to work, if only temporarily. Most economists say the nationwide stimulus effort has generally paid off, although they differ on how much. But the cash infusion appears to have done little to restore public confidence either in the federal government or in the Democratic Party. The stimulus may have created or saved up to 3.6 million jobs, as the White House contends, but the jobless rate in Ohio still hovers at a crippling 10.4 percent. That has left Democrats such as Ganley’s opponent, Rep. Betty Sutton, trying to convince voters that the stimulus made a bad situation somewhat less bad. Doesn’t exactly pop off a bumper sticker. And she ended by bashing Ganley as a hypocrite:  Even Cash for Clunkers is difficult to measure empirically. Ganley is a critic, but some of his competitors are big fans. “It jump-started the entire industry, and it couldn’t have come at a more opportune time,” said Alan Spitzer, chief executive of Spitzer Auto Group, who urged Sutton to push the rebate program and whose 23 dealerships sold about 1,000 cars through Cash for Clunkers. Joseph Lee, plant manager of the Avon Lake Ford plant, said the steady decline in production, which forced 200 layoffs in 2009, started to level off when Cash for Clunkers took effect. That was true even though his plant makes gas-guzzling Econoline vans, not the compact cars that were selling best. “All I know is my plant was shutting down week after week. And then we weren’t.” A year ago, even Ganley had a rosier assessment of the program. He told the Cleveland Plain Dealer that it “certainly primed the pump,” although he complained about its execution. “It’s a little duplicitous,” Spitzer said of Ganley’s reversal. “This program woke up the market. It was an unqualified success.” [Image of Sutton from the conservative site www.bettysutton2010.com ]

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WaPo Wonders: How Can You Spend a Trillion Dollars with ‘Tangible Results’ and Be Doubted?

"No Excuses" for Truck Blindspots: New Campaign to End Unnecessary Deaths

Image credit: Transport for London We already know what the single most important tip for staying safe on a bike is. But activists and road safety experts are stepping up their efforts to do something about truck blind spots. From bereaved mothers campaigning for technology to keep cyclists safe through to traffic lights that alert drivers… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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"No Excuses" for Truck Blindspots: New Campaign to End Unnecessary Deaths