Speeding could cost drivers much more than a ticket

Speeding could cost drivers much more than a ticket

Saving less than a minute of our daily commute costs Americans $22 million a day

By Mary Randolph edited by Andrea Thompson

Cars on a highway seen at an oblique angle and motion blurred

James Osmond/Getty Images

By adding just one minute to their daily drive travelAmerican drivers could save more than $20 million and avoid nearly 60,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions every day, according to a new study.

The fact that speed increases fuel consumption is not new, says study co-author Will Northropprofessor of mechanical engineering at the University of Minnesota. As a car accelerates, the resistance of the air pushing it increases and forces the engine to work harder, using more fuel to achieve the same speed. But we didn’t provide numbers for that, and that’s where the Northrop team and a data set on the trajectories of American cars come in.

“What’s unique about our work and what motivated us is that we had a very large data set, which allowed us to really understand the real impact of vehicle trajectories and speed on fuel economy,” he says.


On supporting science journalism

If you enjoy this article, please consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribe. By purchasing a subscription, you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.


The team used a set of raw data collected from automakers that tracked the locations and speeds of cars across the country every three seconds on four separate days at different times of the year. From there, researchers mapped locations based on speed limits and studied vehicle trajectories; they anonymized the specific GPS coordinates after performing the speed calculations.

Out of 120 million trips, 43.2% involved speeding. Use a supercomputerthe Northrop team modeled a hypothetical version of each trip without speeding — a daunting data processing task that took years.

When the authors extrapolated their results to an entire year of driving, they estimated that by giving up speeding, drivers would have saved $22 million per day, based on 2021 gasoline prices. In a recent analysis adjusted for Gas prices 2026the daily cost amounted to $26 million.

Although the study, published Thursday in Communications sustainabilityhighlights “the magnitude of day-to-day savings,” Northrop says, other research questions remain. His team is curious about the fuel effects of acceleration and aggressive driving as well as other air pollutants that might increase with speed. This study also doesn’t take into account real-world circumstances related to speeding, such as traffic patterns, he adds, which can make it harder to quit the habit completely.

“We don’t have a social solution; we’re engineers,” Northrop says. “We’re putting the data out there so people know it’s the cause of the speed.”

It’s time to defend science

If you enjoyed this article, I would like to ask for your support. Scientific American has been defending science and industry for 180 years, and we are currently experiencing perhaps the most critical moment in these two centuries of history.

I was a Scientific American subscriber since the age of 12, and it helped shape the way I see the world. SciAm always educates and delights me, and inspires a sense of respect for our vast and beautiful universe. I hope this is the case for you too.

If you subscribe to Scientific Americanyou help ensure our coverage centers on meaningful research and discoveries; that we have the resources to account for decisions that threaten laboratories across the United States; and that we support budding and working scientists at a time when the value of science itself too often goes unrecognized.

In exchange, you receive essential information, captivating podcastsbrilliant infographics, newsletters not to be missedunmissable videos, stimulating gamesand the best writings and reports from the scientific world. You can even give someone a subscription.

There has never been a more important time for us to stand up and show why science matters. I hope you will support us in this mission.

Exit mobile version