Commute miles and Carbon Footprints

One of the many reasons I promote homeworking for certain types of job (it isn’t suited to “any job” by any means) is that it improves your carbon footprint.

I was challenged on this by a client recently, who asked “what about the additional heating of your home?”

So I did a bit of analysis (it being wot I do..) This is a superficial analysis – just looking at the commute and the additional home heating. I’ll do a more detailed model for all costs (electricity to run your home computer etc – although many of these are offset by the fact that you’d be running a computer if you were in the office anyway).

Getting to grips with a home-worker’s CO2 Footprint

So… And this will vary according to your circumstances, but here are mine.

If I commuted to the office every day, my commute would involve a 5 mile car journey to the local railway station, a 50 mile trip into london and a short walk from Waterloo to my office.

So… that’s 10 miles a day by car, and 100 miles / day by train (because I’m going there and back)

For simplicity, I’m assuming 200 commute days a year. So that’s 2000 car miles, and 20,000 train miles.

In CO2 terms that works out (using the calculator at Carbon Footprint ) as ;

Car – .844 tonnes / year

Rail – 1.938 tonnes / year

In cost terms it works out as -

Car (assuming a generous 45 miles / gal.. which my American mande 2 litre Beetle does not do on short runs) – £213.33

Rail (for a season ticket) – £4132

How does this compare with my home-worker CO2 footprint?

My central heating bill has risen by approx £10 / month. So that’s an annual cost of £120 and an annual release of CO2 of .055 tonnes.

So comparing the two options…

Commuter Gary – 2.78 tonnes of CO2 (at a cost of £4345 per year)
Homeworker Gary – .055 tonnes (at a cost of $120 per year).

So by not commuting, using just this rather simplistic and limited set of digits -

I’m releasing 50 times less CO2, and spending 36 times less on travel.

Go figure!

I’m going to write a little php script so you can do this yourself, since it’s unlikely that you have the same car / commute as me…


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5 Responses to “Commute miles and Carbon Footprints”

  1. worth taking into to cosideration the average commute in the UK is 8.7 miles (one way). However people in the UK have the second longest commute in Europe .

    Ref. Department for Transport, 2007 Travel to Work – Personal Travel Factsheet

    shane

  2. also relevant is the reduced energy consumption at your office.

  3. shane,

    Thanks for your comments… will chase up the DT paper, interesting stuff!

    The reduced energy consumption at the office issue is interesting, and important, but I deliberately ignore it to avoid the “well they’d be using that energy anyway” comments that always follow.

    But… if you’re a growing company, the premises cost saving is potentially huge

  4. Can’t beleive you’ve defected to an American built VW, remember your detroit roots man

  5. Hey Mark!

    I know, I felt bad about turning by back on the American car industry.. If it helps, I did drive a Jeep Grand Cherokee while I was living in the US… when you boot that big beast you can get the fuel economy down to 7/8 MPG… but at the time gas was more or less free!

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