| Annual savings potential: Annual public cost: Public cost per ton: Implementing agency: Horizon year: |
48,800 tons $12,400,000 $700 Caltrain Joint Powers Board 2025 |
Assumptions
- 6,200 metric tons of emissions abatement will result from the decrease in auto travel as a result of faster, more reliable transit service.
- Almost 42,000 tons of emissions abatement will result from reduced energy consumption by Caltrain.
Analysis
Electrifying Caltrain would benefit commuters by providing somewhat
faster service. This improvement would yield a significant increase in
ridership. In addition, electrified trains would consume less
propulsion energy, yielding a large decrease in emissions. The majority
of this abatement would result from reduced energy consumption. The
remainder would result from reduced auto travel resulting from more
commuters choosing Caltrain. However, the combined benefits do not
yield enough emissions abatement to justify the capital investment on
the basis of emissions alone.
Relative Impact
There will be 145.93 million daily
vehicle miles traveled in the Caltrain corridor by 2030, generating
approximately 15.54 metric tons of CO2 emissions per year.1 The total existing CO2 emissions from Caltrain operations is an estimated 58,000 metric tons per year.2
What we do now
Caltrain provides commuter rail service from Gilroy to Fourth and King
streets in downtown San Francisco. These trains are propelled by
diesel-powered locomotives. The train service is operated but the
Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board, which is a partnership between
the municipalities along the San Francisco Peninsula. Caltrain has
significantly increased its ridership in recent years, particularly
after the introduction of “baby bullet” service, which offers commuters
a rapid, skip-stop commuter service.
What we could do
Part of Caltrains long-term capital improvement vision is a plan to
electrify its train service, switching from trains propelled by diesel
locomotives to electric multiple unit trains. Electrification would
have two benefits for CO2 emissions. First, EMU trains can accelerate
and decelerate faster than diesel-powered trains, resulting in improved
travel times. Second, EMUs would consume significantly less energy for
propulsion than diesel locomotives, reducing emissions.
Cost
The electrification program would require
significant new capital investments for new rolling stock, overhead
wire, and associated facilities. Caltrain most recently estimated the
cost of its electrification program in its Caltrain 2025 vision. In
that document, it estimated that transitioning to non-compliant EMU
trains would add an additional $34.23 million to the organization’s
costs by 2025, including both the life cycle cost of equipment and well
as operations and maintenance.3
Carbon savings potential
Electrification of the Caltrain corridor will reduce emissions by a
total of 48,800 metric tons per year. The majority of this abatement,
42,500 metric tons, would result from reduced energy consumption. The
remainder, 6,200 metric tons, would result from reduced auto travel
resulting from more commuters choosing Caltrain. The cost of emissions
abatement would be $700 per metric ton.
Endnotes
1 Downtown Transit Center FEIS
2 Caltrain Electrification EIR chapter 3
3 Caltrain 2025. www.caltrain.com/caltrain2025.html


