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What is public transit's effect on the environment? A U of T researcher crunches the numbers

The latest extension of the London Underground 鈥渢urned out to be a bit of a mixed bag,鈥 and Toronto's Sheppard subway line initially struggled to provide greenhouse gas savings with low ridership
Photo of Shoshanna Saxe
Professor Shoshanna Saxe analyses the environmental and social impact of large public transit infrastructure projects, equipping policymakers with data as they decide which investments to make (photo by Tyler Irving)

The benefits of building public transit include reducing greenhouse gas emissions, relieving traffic congestion and expanding a growing city. Yet each transit project is unique, and often the immediate environmental benefits can be a mixed bag.

Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering Shoshanna Saxe crunches the numbers on existing infrastructure to provide key decision-makers with a reality check on the environmental and social impacts of today鈥檚 transit investments. 

鈥淓ngineers usually aren鈥檛 involved in policymaking, and policymakers usually aren鈥檛 involved in engineering,鈥 says Saxe. 鈥淚鈥檓 trying to bridge that gap.鈥

Saxe joined U of T's Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering in August 2016.

Before completing her PhD at the University of Cambridge, she spent three years at a major consulting engineering firm in Toronto, working on projects such as the Eglinton Crosstown transit line and the Toronto-York Spadina subway extension.

鈥淚 love design 鈥 it鈥檚 amazing,鈥 she says. 鈥淗owever, when you鈥檙e building things that people are going to use, you have to stay well within the limits of what you know for sure. I was curious about questions that we didn鈥檛 already know the answers to.鈥

During her PhD, Saxe conducted a detailed analysis of the London Underground鈥檚 extension of the Jubilee Line, which was completed in 1999. She gathered data on the greenhouse gases produced during construction and operation of the line, then used transit and land-use surveys to estimate the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions attributable to people using the line and living near it. By combining the two, she could calculate the net environmental benefit of that transit project.

鈥淚t turned out to be a bit of a mixed bag,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you make some optimistic assumptions, you could say that it broke even in terms of greenhouse gas emissions around 2012 or 2013. If you are more pessimistic, you鈥檙e looking at a greenhouse gas payback of twice as long.鈥

Saxe says that the Jubilee Line extension sees approximately 175 million trips per year. On projects where ridership is low, the environmental payback period can be much longer.

Saxe also studied the Sheppard subway line in Toronto and found it initially struggled to provide greenhouse gas savings with a much lower ridership. Over time, the Sheppard Subway Line has benefited from the decreasing emissions associated with electricity in Ontario. The results of the Sheppard Subway study were recently published in the journal

鈥淚f you鈥檙e at Don Mills station, and you want to go north, east, or even southeast, the network doesn鈥檛 serve you yet,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e still see people from that area driving 70 per cent of the time so unfortunately there鈥檚 just a lot less opportunity for savings.鈥

Saxe says that her dream project would be to follow a major piece of infrastructure such as a new transit line from conception through construction and use for 20 or 30 years.

鈥淚 want to answer questions like: why did we originally build it, how did we originally build it, how did it perform over its lifetime, how did we maintain it and what did it need?鈥 she says. 鈥淚f we know how our present decision-making affects things decades from now, we can make better decisions.鈥

Engineering