Minnesotans may be urged to put down the car keys in a new effort to cut greenhouse gas emissions from transportation and fight climate change.
The House Sustainable Transportation Act would build more stations for charging electric cars and swapping batteries, push local governments to electrify their fleets and prod the Metropolitan Council to electrify all its buses by 2040, among other things.
It would also put into statute a new statewide goal to reduce vehicle miles driven by at least 20% by 2050.
A handful of states, including California and Washington, have set concrete targets, according to Move Minnesota, a transit advocacy group.
The measure was discussed in an informational hearing Thursday in the House Transportation Finance and Policy Committee. Committee Chairman Frank Hornstein, a Minneapolis DFLer, is the item's lead author.
Electric vehicles alone won't get the state on track with legislated goals for cutting greenhouse gases, Hornstein told the committee. Transportation is the largest source of emissions, and electric vehicles are still less than 1% of new vehicle sales.
"We have a long way to go, and driving less really is one of the key ways we can reduce greenhouse gases," Hornstein said. "We are going to have to do things differently."
Sam Rockwell, executive director of Move Minnesota, agreed that Minnesota's slow shift to electric vehicles isn't enough and won't happen fast enough for climate change timelines.