Skip to Content
Streetsblog San Francisco home
Streetsblog San Francisco home
Log In
Streetsblog.net

Survey: Americans Want DOTs to Factor Climate Change in Their Decisions

Graph: NRDC
Graphic: NRDC
false

Should we continue to let state transportation departments spend tens of billions of dollars in federal funds each year without regard to how highway expansions contribute to climate change? Right now U.S. DOT is looking to inject some accountability into a process that has created a very carbon-intensive transportation system, and a new poll suggests most Americans would welcome that.

The telephone survey of 1,ooo adults, commissioned by the Natural Resources Defense Council, found that most Americans think that emissions from cars and trucks should factor into the decisions of transportation agencies. NRDC writes: "78 percent of Americans agree that 'state transportation agencies should take vehicle-related carbon pollution and climate change into account when developing transportation plans, and also seek ways to reduce that pollution.'"

Responses varied somewhat across political lines, but solid majorities agree with the statement regardless of party: 92 percent of Democrats, 79 percent of Independents, and 64 percent of Republicans.

Support is especially strong among adults 18-34 (86 percent), women (88 percent), and Latinos (88 percent).

"We should modernize the way we plan and build the transportation systems of the future," said Pete Altman, director of federal campaigns at NRDC. "President Obama has an opportunity, by delivering strong results, to cement a climate legacy as firmly grounded in transportation as it has been in the power sector.”

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog San Francisco

Congestion Pricing: Is it Time to Try it in San Francisco?

Congestion pricing has been an unqualified success in New York (and lots of other places). Why wouldn't it work here? That was the question on a recent episode of State of the Bay on KALW

January 14, 2026

Supervisor Wong’s Attempt to Put Cars Back on Sunset Dunes Crashes

Plus an ode to Sunset Dunes: "To the Neighbors — and the One Who Now Speaks for Them"

January 13, 2026
See all posts