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<p align="center">&nbsp;</p>
<div align="center"><a href="http://bikeforpeace.org"><img src="/images/bfp_header_blue.jpg" alt="Get Proactive: Pedal For Peace" width="700" height="105" border="0" /></a> 
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        <h1>Facts About Transportation</h1>
        <h1>Modern History Isn't Very Pretty</h1>
        <p> Fact Sheet #3 from the Alliance for a Paving Moratorium</p>
        <p>&nbsp;</p>
        <p><img src="/images/car_consiquence.jpg" alt="The automobile is centeral to so much of what's wrong with the world today" width="700" height="428" /><br />
        </p>
        <p align="left">Bikes At Work has some good information on <a href="http://www.bikesatwork.com/carfree/automobiles-and-environment.html" target="_blank">Automobiles and The Environment</a></p>
        <p align="left">Bicycle Universe has some good information on <a href="http://bicycleuniverse.info/index.html" target="_blank">Automobile Energy Use and Pollution</a></p>
        <p align="left">&nbsp;</p>
        <p align="left"> &#8226; Approximately one million animals per day are 

          killed on U.S. roads. Cars are the leading cause of death of endangered 

          species such as the mountain lion in Southern California. Source: Auto-Free 

          Times, Spring 1996 <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; Sixty-five percent of all carbon monoxide emitted into the environment 

          is from road vehicles, which besides being fatal, contributes to global 

          warming by removing hydroxyl radical from the air, allowing buildup 

          of methane (a powerful greenhouse gas). Source: Greenpeace&#8217;s Environmental 

          Impact of the Car, 1992 <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; In African communities cargo transported on the (usually a woman&#8217;s) 

          head or back is on average 17 kilograms. One could comfortably carry 

          50 kg on a bicycle; 150 kg with the attachment of a trailer. Unfortunately, 

          cultural mores discourage women from using bicycles. Source: Bikes for 

          Africa; Institute for Transportation and Development Policy <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; Countries like Brazil, Turkey, India and Kenya are spending 

          from 30 to 50% of their foreign exchange on oil imports. The South is 

          responsible for 45% of the annual increases in fuel emissions causing 

          global warming and creating serious health problems. Much of this can 

          be attributed to the growth of private car use, expected to double by 

          the year 2010 from the current fleet of 500 million cars. Source: Michael 

          Replogle and Walter Hook, Institute for Transportation and Development 

          Policy, in Race, Poverty and the Environment, Fall 1995 (Earth Island 

          Institute) <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; Each year, more than 500,000 people die in road accidents. Seventy 

          percent of these deaths are in &#8220;developing countries.&#8221; Two-thirds 

          of deaths involve pedestrians, of which one-third are children. In Africa, 

          between 60 and 80% of urban dwellers use some form of public transport, 

          walk, or use bicycles. A similar situation exists in Asia. Source: The 

          World Bank, The Urban Age, Fall 1993. <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; Public transport trips represent about 25% of all urban trips 

          in Europe, but only 4% in the United States. Source: ibid <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; The first large scale urban streetcar abandonment&#8217;s were 

          orchestrated by General Motors in 1925. GM went on to bankroll National 

          City Lines (buses), which began buying up streetcar companies, and, 

          with Standard Oil of California (Chevron), Phillips Petroleum, Firestone 

          Tire and Mack Truck tore out the tracks in eighty-five American cities. 

          Source: Martha Olson, in Race, Poverty and the Environment, Fall 1995 

          <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; Traffic calming-utilizing speed bumps, narrower streets and 

          [reduced field of vision]-have contributed to a 50% reduction in pedestrian 

          vehicle accidents in Europe. Canadians imported a Danish program, Safe 

          Routes to Schools, installing traffic calming to slow speeds on key 

          streets and reduced accidents by 85%. Source: ibid <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; From 1960 to 1990, U.S. auto travel increased 198% in miles 

          traveled; there were 133% more registered cars; 126% more fuel was used; 

          licensed drivers increased by 91%, while the nation&#8217;s population 

          went up 39%. Whereas 69.5% of Americans commuted by car in 1960, 86.5% 

          did so in 1990. Commuting by public transit decreased from 12.6% of 

          all commuters to 5.3%, and walking decreased from 10.4 to 3.9%. Those 

          working at home decreased from 7.5% to 3%. Source: Federal Highway Administration, 

          U.S. Dept. of Energy (San Francisco Examiner&#8217;s Nov. 26, 1995 edition) 

          <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; In 1994 U.S. drivers motored 2.3 trillion miles, up from &#8220;only&#8221; 

          603 billion miles in 1955. Source: ibid <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; Increasing congestion on U.S. Interstate Highways has been measured 

          by the percent of roads at or near capacity at rush hour, from 1975 

          when it was 41%, to 1993&#8217;s 69%. Due to funding new-road construction, 

          pavement worsens on the Interstates to the point that 58.4% of these 

          highways need repair now or will in the very near future. Source: ibid 

          <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; Every minute, the U.S. loses three acres of productive farmland 

          to urban sprawl, via road building and car/truck dependence. Since the 

          first Earth Day, 1970, we have lost more than 40 million acres of farmland 

          to development. In Lodi, Calif., rich soils 40 feet deep were covered 

          recently by a Wal-Mart lot. Source: American Farmland Trust <br />

          <br />

          &#8226; In American cities, close to half of all urban space goes to 

          accommodate the automobile, leaving more land devoted to cars than to 

          housing. Nearly 100,000 people a year are displaced in the U.S. by new 

          highway construction. Sources: Michael Renner, Worldwatch Paper #84 

          (1988); Jeremy Rifkin, Entropy: Into the Greenhouse World (Bantam, 1989). 

          Reproduced in Getting There: Strategic Facts for the Transportation 

          Advocate (Advocacy Institute, 1996) <br />
        </p>
        <p align="center">Back to <a href="http://bikeforpeace.org/">BikeForPeace.org</a></p>
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