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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August 19th, 2008 at 11:15 am
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
August 19th, 2008 at 11:17 am
also relevant is the reduced energy consumption at your office.
August 19th, 2008 at 11:59 am
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
September 4th, 2008 at 6:47 pm
Can’t beleive you’ve defected to an American built VW, remember your detroit roots man
September 26th, 2008 at 9:27 am
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!