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Climate change is already affecting Oregon's economy, environment, and way of life. The evidence is stark: wildfires, flooding, landslides, and other extreme weather have caused loss of life, damaged our roads, destroyed homes, and cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars each year. We are taking action through programs dedicated to:
Learn more about progress on the Oregon Transportation Emissions website:
Electrifying our transportation system is a key strategy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and move Oregon towards a cleaner future.
ODOT's role is to fund public electric vehicle charging infrastructure. While most charging happens at home, public charging is needed for multi-unit dwellings, at workplaces, and for longer distance trips. ODOT provides funding to private entities who own, install and maintain the infrastructure.
ODOT’s efforts to add public charging infrastructure will help reduce range anxiety and improve accessibility for all users. Those efforts combined with private sector investments, rules and regulations, greater availability of vehicles, and purchase incentive programs will help to increase electric vehicle use.
The Sustainability Program works with agency experts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from our work. We follow our Sustainability Plan and focus on four areas: transitioning our vehicles to hybrid and electric; making our facilities more energy efficient; using low-carbon construction materials; and green public procurement. In 2021, we inventoried greenhouse gas emissions from our work and learned some baseline statistics:
Since then, we've been working to lower emissions from the fuels we use.
Other focus areas include conserving resources, such as water and energy in ODOT business and operations and efforts like the Oregon Solar Highways Program.
The effect of climate change — like flooding, sweltering heat, wildfires, and other extreme weather — threaten our transportation system statewide. Those threats are expected to get worse in the coming decades.
Responding to extreme weather events and repairing the damage they cause is expensive. And costs are rising every few years.
In contrast, the cost to proactively address risks is much lower than having to repair a road once it fails. Every $4 spent on proactive resilience saves about $25 in repairs.
We need to be proactive and prepare the transportation system to withstand climate change and extreme weather.
The Climate Adaptation and Resilience Roadmap is our proactive approach. It provides policies and strategies for making adaptation and resilience a regular part of how we invest in and maintain the multi-modal transportation system.
To submit a question or comment:
Annual - Fund and direct the deployment of transportation electrification public charging infrastructure.
2026 - Apply a climate lens to ODOT investment decisions, increasing investments that result in emissions reductions or infrastructure that is more resilient to climate change and extreme weather.
2026 - Reduce GHG emissions from ODOT’s fleets and buildings.
2026 - Develop passenger vehicle miles per capita reduction strategies to align with Oregon's Transportation Plan target of 20% reduction by 2050 and monitor and report on progress.
2028 - Reduce GHG emissions from materials used by ODOT.
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