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‘How much extra carbon dioxide was emitted because of the cyclist?’ asks A-Level exam paper

Starring some bloke on a bike as a pollution-inducing impediment

We were pointed in the direction of a question on this A-level physics exam paper from Edexcel today. The question is about how much extra carbon dioxide is emitted as a result of cars ‘queuing’ behind a cyclist on a narrow rural road.

Carlton Reid, who plans on featuring the question in his upcoming book Bike Boom says it was brought to his attention by his daughter. He says it is a prime example of the ‘insidious’ trope that cyclists cause air pollution.

Here’s the question in full.

Exam question part one.jpg
Exam question part two.jpg

It strikes us that it would be ten long minutes for the cyclist with three cars queued up behind.

We did wonder whether the final answer punchline was that carbon dioxide emissions would be higher once the cyclist had become a motorist. However, according to the answers (and somewhat miraculously, also according to our own calculations before we found those answers), this is not the case.

A possible follow-up question could perhaps have been: ‘How many of these motorists need to get on their bikes before carbon dioxide emissions are reduced?

We’d also quite like to see a similar question for an urban location where average driving speeds are significantly lower even without one of those pesky cyclists causing pollution by holding everyone up.

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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57 comments

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Loshu replied to brooksby | 7 years ago
0 likes

The graph is presumably for a single car.

Is there a CO2 reduction from the queing cars drafting? or only if they tail gated?

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Griff500 | 7 years ago
7 likes

Ricardo did a more thorough exercise in evaluating any increased emissions on introduction of 20mph speed limits. Their conclusion:

• 1. There is no direct relationship between fuel economy and posted speed limits – the impact of 20 mph speed limits depends on changing driver behaviour

• 2. Steady-speed results and “emissions factor” curves must be used with care

• 3. IF the reason to introduce 20 mph limits is to: • encourage more walking and cycling • encourage slower, smoother, more considerate driving THEN it seems likely that this should result in a reduction in carbon emissions and quite possibly NOx and PM

 

And the DoT concurred:

“In principle, driving more slowly (at a steady pace) will always save fuel and carbon dioxide emissions unless a quite unnecessarily low gear is being used. The underlying arguments are that moving a vehicle at a lower speed requires less power, and that avoiding unnecessary acceleration and braking saves energy.” Department for Transport 

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m6ayv | 7 years ago
2 likes

Erm yes the amount would be affected as the cyclist is breathing out carbon dioxide but otherwise the emissions from the cars don't actually matter as cars give out way to much no mater how fast they travel unless there electric power that is

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nniff | 7 years ago
8 likes

And there I was thinking that physics was a science of observation and fact. 

I also understand that observation and fact has shown that 'Vorsprung durch Technic' really means 'Technology will overcome the test'.

I rode down the huge traffic jam this morning - two miles of stationary traffic in two lanes, with just enough room between them for little me.  Curiously, I was the only bicycle and the only vehicle making any worthwhile progress.

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FluffyKittenofT... | 7 years ago
5 likes

Is this what science education has come to now?

In an effort to make it 'socially relevant' they end up just revealing their ignorance of politics and sociology?

Do they make any attempt to justify their assumption that the speed of cars is entirely independent of the distribution of transport modes? Or that the car driver's decision to drive that route, use that vehicle, or to undertake the journey at all, is independent of their expected journey time? Everything else is held constant? How realistic an assumption is that?

I'm glad we had proper O levels in my day, as I'd have lost marks by just writing 'oh, just piss off, you're fooling no-one ' as my answer.

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ChrisB200SX | 7 years ago
5 likes

Um, the curve on the graph is entirely wrong. It's well known that driving faster uses more fuel, not less!

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Luxtrundler replied to ChrisB200SX | 7 years ago
6 likes

ChrisB200SX wrote:

Um, the curve on the graph is entirely wrong. It's well known that driving faster uses more fuel, not less!

Yes and no. Had the graph continued above 40mph, the curve heads up again.

Up to about 25mph, the increased efficiency from using higher gears means that emissions decrease with speed. Over 40mph, the effects of wind resistance become greater such that emissions will increase.

I do not see exam questions about the CO2 savings from a queue of traffic being stuck behind a JCB Fastrac at 40mph though. 

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Hugh Davis replied to Luxtrundler | 7 years ago
3 likes

Well the graph goes up to 31 m/s which in my book is 111.6 km/hr which is pretty much exactly 70 mph. I.e this is meant to represet the entire legal range of speeds.

Now if you look at http://www.afdc.energy.gov/data/10312  you will see some govenment data on how fuel consumption dips with speed particularly over 50 mph which for most cars is around the optimal fuel economy.  Typically fuel usage at 70 mph increases by a factor of around 1.5 compared to the cars' optimal speed.

Now I *assume* that CO2 production must be excatly linear with fuel consumption unless the vehicle has some clever device for washing CO2 (not cataytic converters - they turn poisonous gasses into things less poisonous including converting CO into yet more CO2!)

So I believe this graph is a fabrication - possibly VW??

But actually thats EXACTLY the point.  The question assumes that drivers on a lane will drive with the same ecomomy that VW cars drive in a testbed. Which they never do!

 

Luxtrundler wrote:

ChrisB200SX wrote:

Um, the curve on the graph is entirely wrong. It's well known that driving faster uses more fuel, not less!

Yes and no. Had the graph continued above 40mph, the curve heads up again.

Up to about 25mph, the increased efficiency from using higher gears means that emissions decrease with speed. Over 40mph, the effects of wind resistance become greater such that emissions will increase.

I do not see exam questions about the CO2 savings from a queue of traffic being stuck behind a JCB Fastrac at 40mph though. 

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Griff500 replied to Hugh Davis | 7 years ago
1 like

Hugh Davis wrote:

Now if you look at http://www.afdc.energy.gov/data/10312  you will see some govenment data on how fuel consumption dips with speed particularly over 50 mph which for most cars is around the optimal fuel economy.  Typically fuel usage at 70 mph increases by a factor of around 1.5 compared to the cars' optimal speed.

Not so. Using your own reference, for the petrol car (which the OP refers to), at 70mph the car is only 25% less effeiceint rather than your exaggerated 50%.  The car is also significantly more efficient at 70mph than 45mph where your graph cuts off.  

If you want to pursue conspiracy theories then I would point you at the 55mph target.  I have had 2 2 litre turbo diesel cars from the same manufacturer, same model the second of the two having supposedly a more efficient engine and greater efficiency. In order to achieve higher efficiency at 55mph however it has higher gearing, which in my real life 50% rural 50% urvban driving results in 8mpg average less. 

As for the graph being a fabrication?  The same graph is the same "medium sized car" data used by organisations on opposite sides of the 20mph speed limit debate, and Ricardo actually present the data as a scatter plot by model. Surely if it were a fabrication, one of these organisations would have come up with something better. The data is however very different for sub 1.4l cars which are inefficient at highet speeds.

The biggest fallacy in the data presented in the OP is the lack of acceleration and braking, which screws up any constant speed data.

That said, its a bloody school exam question, not a government white paper!

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DrJDog replied to ChrisB200SX | 7 years ago
5 likes

ChrisB200SX wrote:

Um, the curve on the graph is entirely wrong. It's well known that driving faster uses more fuel, not less!

 

It's actually correct. There is a sweet spot minimum on most petrol cars between 40-80 km/h. It's a bit higher when you're going slower, and gets much higher when you go faster.

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EricP | 7 years ago
1 like

The question also doesn't address the Co2 that goes into the rebuilding of roads that's required due to vehicle loadings...  I am thinking of repeated decelerations and accelerations of  100's of kgs

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riotgibbon | 7 years ago
10 likes

you also need to calculate the total life-cycle cost, not just of manufacture, but of disposal too. You also need to factor in the cost of road construction, as cyclists can use the same standard of road, but don't need to. You could easily use these calculations to justify better provision of segregated routes.

But I am interested, as they've actually put some effort into quantifying the question. I thought this video was a one-off: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eS5fQqnB24U  , as it suggests there is an environmental impact of queueing behind cars, but makes no effort to do the boring actual sums

At least with this you have a starting point and some of the core variables to consider. Obviously there are other questions - you regularly see huge queues of cars, without a cyclist in sight, so if you switched from bike to car you would be increasing the probability and impact of those jams.

You also need to consider the total impact of these incidents against the reduced impact of switching from cars to bikes -  yes, there may be the odd occasion where other road users increase their CO2 pollution, but what's the overall situation

 

I love these sort of questions ...

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VeloVert | 7 years ago
9 likes

And of course this makes no mention of the fact that CO2 isn't even close to being the worst thing that comes out of a cars exhaust pipe.

Added to which, were they Volkswagen cars? If so, you can multiply that CO2 figure by a few......

 

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RedfishUK | 7 years ago
8 likes

Is the Carbon Dioxide figure the actual figure or the lies that are put out by the manufacturers and never challenged by Governments?

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StuInNorway replied to RedfishUK | 7 years ago
10 likes

RedfishUK wrote:

Is the Carbon Dioxide figure the actual figure or the lies that are put out by the manufacturers and never challenged by Governments?

 

If one or more of the cars is a VW group TDi model, calculate the actual emmisions using the correction factor of 734%. . . . This is why if it's a VW/Audi diesel behind, that is where the cyclist prefers them . . .  <Cough cough splutter>

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rct | 7 years ago
16 likes

As the roads are narrow and rural, the top speed the cars may travel at may well reach 65KpH, however as the nature of these roads are invariably narrow and twisty, how often would the cars reach this speed and what is the effect of acceraltions and deceleration when aproaching other hazzards on the road such as bends, unsighted crests of hills and approaching traffic?  Edexcel please show your workings.

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beezus fufoon | 7 years ago
8 likes

18kph! - is this road through a ploughed field?

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muhasib replied to beezus fufoon | 7 years ago
4 likes
beezus fufoon wrote:

18kph! - is this road through a ploughed field?

It's 18 m s-1 not 18kph so 65kph although if you're as hacked off as I am at what seems to pass for an a level physics question these days then it's an easy oversight to make.

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beezus fufoon replied to muhasib | 7 years ago
4 likes

muhasib wrote:
beezus fufoon wrote:

18kph! - is this road through a ploughed field?

It's 18 m s-1 not 18kph so 65kph although if you're as hacked off as I am at what seems to pass for an a level physics question these days then it's an easy oversight to make.

5 metres per second is 18kph

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burtthebike | 7 years ago
11 likes

Just typical of the nasty insidious anti-cycling propaganda and clearly designed to detract from the overwhelming benefits of cycling.

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EricP | 7 years ago
7 likes

Judging by part ii) Edexcel are a bit sexist too

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esayers | 7 years ago
10 likes

Or, cars release the same amount of CO2 during their manufacture as they do, on average, for a lifetime of use. In the situation described above, what additional CO2 is released over a cyclist whos bikes manufacture cost 0.02kg per km on average?

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Yorkshire wallet | 7 years ago
25 likes

Was the cyclist wearing a helmet?

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Mungecrundle | 7 years ago
7 likes

c. The CO2 emmissions quoted are for the fuel consumed by each vehicle. Factor in the CO2 generated by the car production and end of life recycling processes, also the CO2 associated with the recovery of crude oil, refining into road fuels and delivery to the petrol station forecourt.

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esayers replied to Mungecrundle | 7 years ago
4 likes

Mungecrundle wrote:

c. The CO2 emmissions quoted are for the fuel consumed by each vehicle. Factor in the CO2 generated by the car production and end of life recycling processes, also the CO2 associated with the recovery of crude oil, refining into road fuels and delivery to the petrol station forecourt.

You got their first while I was trying to do the calculations!

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steviemarco | 7 years ago
11 likes

What if there were 3 cyclists on the road that would mean 3 less cars = zero emmissions, in turn cancelling out the immisions of the 3 cars queing behind them? 

 

But YES, propaganda I agree

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davel | 7 years ago
22 likes

Propaganda, pure and simple.

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