Bengaluru world’s 2nd slowest city to drive in, 5th highest in CO2 emissions during rush hour
India

Bengaluru world’s 2nd slowest city to drive in, 5th highest in CO2 emissions during rush hour

The absolutely slowest city to drive in in the word is London, where people take 36 minutes and 20 seconds to go 10 kilometres.

   
File photo of a heavy traffic jam in Bengaluru

File photo of a heavy traffic jam in Bengaluru | ANI

New Delhi: Bengaluru is the second-slowest city to drive in, according to new research.

One can go 10 kilometres in the southern city in 29 minutes and 10 seconds, says TomTom, a Dutch multinational developer of location technology.

The absolutely slowest city to drive in in the word is London, where people take 36 minutes and 20 seconds to go 10 kilometres – the longest time for a journey of that distance out of 389 cities in 56 countries surveyed in 2022.

“Analysis of the cost of driving, based on the price of petrol, diesel, and charging an electric vehicle (EV), and taking into account the impact of congestion on fuel consumption, found that London was also the world’s second most expensive city to drive in last year, behind Hong Kong,” the BBC reported.

In the third and fourth positions are Dublin, Ireland, at 28 minutes and 30 seconds, and Sapporo, Japan, at 27 minutes and 40 seconds.

A specialist in geolocation technologies, TomTom released the 12th edition of its annual traffic index Tuesday.

The study ranked Bengaluru fourth in cities where traffic alone accounted for lost time. In 2022, Bengaluru lost 129 hours for a round trip (of six miles each) driven at rush hour. This table was topped by Dublin, with Bucharest and London coming second and third.

The Karnataka capital is fifth in the table – “Cities with the highest CO2 emissions per driven miles at rush hour”.

Average annual CO2 emission based on a six-mile round trip in Bengaluru is 974 kgs for petrol cars. London, Paris, Manila and Bucharest are above Bengaluru in that order.

The study also notes that the average cost of driving increased 27% for a typical petrol car in 2022 vs 2021.

2022 also saw an increase in energy prices due to several factors — disrupted supply chains, bad weather, lower investments, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine — which greatly exacerbated the situation, the study says.

With more and more people going back to work, congestion increased fuel consumption as well.

Drivers around the world spent 27% more on average to fill up their petrol tanks than in 2021, while those driving diesel cars shelled out 48% more in 2022 than the year before, the study says.

Hong Kong became the costliest city to drive in, with more than US$1000 ($1023) spent by a driver commuting every day at rush hour.


Also read: Polls soon, Karnataka govt to name Shivamogga airport after Yediyurappa year after he opposed move