A law hailed by climate change activists calls for major state highway projects in Minnesota to curb greenhouse gas emissions. And if it doesn’t, a road expansion, an interchange, an E-ZPass lane and other projects could be defunded or even abandoned.
Those are extreme examples. But the state law, passed in 2023 and refined this year, sets its sights squarely on transportation — confronting Minnesotans’ love affair with their cars, the single biggest contributor to atmosphere-choking gases.
In doing so, the DFL-controlled Legislature directed the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) — a road builder born more than a century ago as the State Highway Commission — to give Minnesotans more choices so they drive less.
“We’ve created a roadmap for a better way of living,” said Rep. Larry Kraft, DFL-St. Louis Park, the freshman lawmaker who championed the new climate law with a team of allies. “We have to think differently and change systems.”
Those systems involve the factors that MnDOT’s highway planners consider when deciding whether to expand roads and highway infrastructure. Come next year, they will have to take into account climate impacts, including greenhouse gas emissions, plus demand for vehicle miles traveled, a key metric that measures the amount of time people spend driving.
If those calculations do not meet MnDOT’s targets, the scope of the project must be altered “until it conforms,” or it could be dropped, according a state working group that studied the new law.
Or, a system of offsets could be deployed, such as public transit projects, bike and pedestrian paths, prairie restoration or highway roundabouts.
“The goal is to really change the way we think about transportation investments and to create a framework that strongly encourages more multi-modal investments that don’t require as much driving,” said Sam Rockwell, executive director of Move Minnesota, a St. Paul nonprofit that promotes sustainable transportation.