CA becomes first state to regulate environmental
impact of ridesharing companies
Local governments, environmental groups hail signing of SB 1014
as cities grapple with growing impacts of Uber and Lyft
SAN FRANCISCO—California became the first state in the nation to regulate the transportation pollution produced by the surge in
popularity of ridesharing on Thursdayevening, as Gov. Brown signed SB 1014, a bill requiring transportation network
companies (TNCs) to account for, and reduce, the greenhouse gas emissions of their operations. The explosive growth of
ride-hailing companies has left states facing a growing list of unintended consequences caused by on-demand
transportation companies like Uber and Lyft.
SB 1014, sponsored by Assembly Member Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley), requires state regulators to quantify emissions from
ridesharing vehicles and set emission targets for TNCs, while requiring companies to develop plans to reduce those
emissions. By prioritizing trips made in zero-emission vehicles, ridesharing companies can help popularize clean
transportation, and help California meet its goal of putting 5 million zero-emission vehicles on the road by 2030.
What:
SB 1014 becomes law in California, making it first state to regulate environmental impact of ridesharing.
More Information
Studies show that ride-hailing services have grown at the expense of public transit use and walking and biking. In San
Francisco, it’s estimated that TNC companies produce the same amount of greenhouse gas emissions as 100,000 households
produce in a year. That’s a big problem in California, where transportation emissions, the largest source of emissions
in the state, have hit their highest level in ten years and are threatening the state’s ability to meet its climate
goals.
A new national study found that in nine major metro areas, TNCs have added 5.7 billion miles of driving annually.
Brown signed the bill aboard a plug-in hybrid electric ferry in San Francisco Bay as part of a package of legislation
aimed at boosting zero-emissions vehicles and getting dirty cars and trucks off the road.
“Whether we travel by car, bus, or boat the need to move to zero-emission transportation is urgent,” Brown said
Thursday.