Sustainable Transport Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Sustainable Transport stocks.

Sustainable Transport Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 15 LYFT UPDATE 1-Uber unveils US shuttle service, expands Costco tie-up to woo price-conscious users
May 15 LYFT Uber unveils US shuttle service, expands Costco tie-up to woo price-conscious users
May 15 LI Wall Street Bulls Look Optimistic About Li Auto (LI): Should You Buy?
May 15 LI Is Now the Time to Buy Li Auto Stock?
May 15 LYFT Lyft: With Accelerating Bookings And EBITDA Gains, There's A Reason To Smile Again (Rating Upgrade)
May 14 LYFT 4 Reasons Why Lyft Is on the Right Track
May 14 NKLA Nikola Stock Jumped Again Today. Buy, Sell, or Hold?
May 14 NKLA Why These Former Meme-Stock EV Companies Are Surging Now
May 14 LI Why Biden's tariffs on Chinese EVs will have little immediate impact on the US auto market
May 14 NKLA Is Trending Stock Nikola Corporation (NKLA) a Buy Now?
May 14 NKLA Nikola Corporation: Messy Picture Continues - Strong Sell (Rating Downgrade)
May 14 LYFT UBER to Acquire German Firm's Food Delivery Unit in Taiwan
May 13 LI Nio Readies Its First Mass-Market EV After 'Taking Apart A Lot Of Tesla Vehicles'
May 13 LYFT UPDATE 1-Massachusetts takes Uber, Lyft to trial over whether drivers are employees
May 13 LI Biden Plans Heavier Tariffs on Chinese EVs. 3 Reasons the Stock Are Gaining.
May 13 NKLA Electric Vehicle (EV) ETFs Struggling: Near-Term Turnaround Likely?
May 13 LYFT Uber and Lyft face landmark trial in Massachusetts on the status of rideshare drivers
May 13 LYFT 3 Reasons I'll Take Uber Stock Over Lyft Despite the Lousy Response to Q1
May 13 LYFT Massachusetts takes Uber, Lyft to trial over status of gig workers
May 11 NKLA Tesla's Ongoing Austerity Measures, Rivian-Apple Partnership Buzz, Biden Administration's Clampdown: Biggest EV Stories Of The Week
Sustainable Transport

Sustainable transport refers to the broad subject of transport that is sustainable in the senses of social, environmental and climate impacts. Components for evaluating sustainability include the particular vehicles used for road, water or air transport; the source of energy; and the infrastructure used to accommodate the transport (roads, railways, airways, waterways, canals and terminals). Transport operations and logistics as well as transit-oriented development are also involved in evaluation. Transportation sustainability is largely being measured by transportation system effectiveness and efficiency as well as the environmental and climate impacts of the system.Short-term activity often promotes incremental improvement in fuel efficiency and vehicle emissions controls while long-term goals include migrating transportation from fossil-based energy to other alternatives such as renewable energy and use of other renewable resources. The entire life cycle of transport systems is subject to sustainability measurement and optimization.Sustainable transport systems make a positive contribution to the environmental, social and economic sustainability of the communities they serve. Transport systems exist to provide social and economic connections, and people quickly take up the opportunities offered by increased mobility, with poor households benefiting greatly from low carbon transport options. The advantages of increased mobility need to be weighed against the environmental, social and economic costs that transport systems pose.
Transport systems have significant impacts on the environment, accounting for between 20% and 25% of world energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions. The majority of the emissions, almost 97%, came from direct burning of fossil fuels. Greenhouse gas emissions from transport are increasing at a faster rate than any other energy using sector. Road transport is also a major contributor to local air pollution and smog.The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) estimates that each year 2.4 million premature deaths from outdoor air pollution could be avoided. Particularly hazardous for health are emissions of black carbon, a component of particulate matter, which is a known cause of respiratory and carcinogenic diseases and a significant contributor to global climate change. The links between greenhouse gas emissions and particulate matter make low carbon transport an increasingly sustainable investment at local level—both by reducing emission levels and thus mitigating climate change; and by improving public health through better air quality.The social costs of transport include road crashes, air pollution, physical inactivity, time taken away from the family while commuting and vulnerability to fuel price increases. Many of these negative impacts fall disproportionately on those social groups who are also least likely to own and drive cars. Traffic congestion imposes economic costs by wasting people's time and by slowing the delivery of goods and services.
Traditional transport planning aims to improve mobility, especially for vehicles, and may fail to adequately consider wider impacts. But the real purpose of transport is access – to work, education, goods and services, friends and family – and there are proven techniques to improve access while simultaneously reducing environmental and social impacts, and managing traffic congestion. Communities which are successfully improving the sustainability of their transport networks are doing so as part of a wider program of creating more vibrant, livable, sustainable cities.

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