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by drewmcarthur
677 days ago
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the problem with comparing these things by their ticket prices is that markets don’t consider externalities. making and fueling a plane might allow me to sell tickets cheaper than a train, but only if we ignore the cost of the carbon output (since neither the flyer nor the airline pay for this, but society at large does) i wonder how this comparison would shake out if you included a carbon tax that effectively measured the cost of these trips on the globe. |
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cheap ETS ($10): 1.5%
expensive ETS ($100): 15%
future DAC ($200): 31%
current DAC: ($600): 92%
Of course this doesn't factor in the cost of the electricity used to power the trains, which would at least partially be from carbon emitting sources. Given that, and the fact that building high speed rail is fraught with uncertainty and cost overruns, the highest fare increase you could plausibly argue for is the "future DAC" figure. This may be enough to advocate for banning air travel for short to medium length journeys, but I doubt long haul flights are going anywhere.
[1] https://www.economist.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=1424,quality=8...
[2] https://www.carbonbrief.org/swiss-company-hoping-capture-1-g...