Please enable Javascript
メイン コンテンツへスキップ

Uber の気候評価および実績レポート

The environmental impact of trips served by Uber’s platform matters. It’s our responsibility to measure that impact by evaluating data gathered from the real-world use of Uber, share the results publicly for greater transparency, and act to improve our climate performance.

November 2023 update: This page reflects metrics for trips completed by zero-emission vehicles (ZEVs) from the beginning of the first quarter of 2021 to the end of the third quarter of 2023. Note that this report includes information related only to Uber’s Mobility business (ridesharing).

「ゼロ エミッションに向けた取り組みには、透明性をもって年々の進捗を公表する責任を求められます。Uber は、利用者の実際のサービス利用による排出量を測定、レポートする初のモビリティ プラットフォームであることに誇りを持っています。」

Uber CEO、Dara Khosrowshahi

ZEV ドライバー

About 74,000 ZEV drivers a month, on average, actively used Uber’s app in Q3 2023 in the US, Canada, and Europe.* That’s nearly double the same period a year earlier.

Metric: Average monthly active ZEV drivers on Uber, by quarter, since Q1 2021, the start of the first full calendar year after announcing our sustainability commitment. Drivers using Uber’s app are counted as active in a given month if they’ve completed at least one trip in that calendar month.

ZEV の配車

In Q3 2023, ZEV drivers provided more than 38 million tailpipe-emissions-free trips using Uber in the US, Canada, and Europe.* This is nearly 2 times the number of ZEV trips completed on Uber during the same period a year earlier.

Metric: Number of trips arranged on the Uber app and fulfilled by ZEV drivers, by quarter since Q1 2021.

ZEV の普及率

In Q3 2023, 9.6% of all on-trip miles in Europe* and 6.5% of all on-trip miles in Canada and the US were completed by ZEV drivers. That represents increases of 2.5 and 2.4 percentage points, respectively, compared with the same period a year earlier. ZEV uptake by drivers using Uber’s app is nearly 6 times higher in Europe and over 7 times higher in Canada and the US than that of drivers in the general population, according to the most recent published government figures (see links below).

Metric: Share of trip miles completed in ZEVs compared with all trip miles arranged by the Uber app, by quarter since Q1 2021.

Note that between Q2 and Q3 2023, we adjusted our methodology for identifying EVs in Europe to improve accuracy (see page 2 of our methodology doc for details), indicated by a dotted line between Q2 and Q3 2023.

Canada and US benchmark data is as of 2022 and is sourced from the International Energy Agency. Note that “BEV” refers to battery electric vehicles. European benchmark data is as of Q2 2023, sourced from the European Commission's European Alternative Fuels Observatory, and only for those European countries indicated below.*

Passenger carbon intensity

In 2022, each mile that a passenger traveled on Uber resulted in an average generation of 147 grams of CO2 in Europe* (or 92 grams of CO2 per kilometer) and 322 grams of CO2 in the US and Canada (or 201 grams of CO2 per kilometer). Compared with 2021, this passenger carbon intensity metric fell 25% in Europe and 11% across the US and Canada. In the US and Canada, 2022 carbon intensity levels continued a 2-year reduction trend, recovering from 2020 highs concurrent with the COVID pandemic to an all-time low since we began measuring more than 6 years ago.

US and Canada
Clear valueopen

Metric: Passenger carbon intensity, or the estimated grams of CO2 per passenger mile traveled, is a climate and efficiency metric used by Uber—and, increasingly, governments and companies around the world. In the case of ridesharing, or any on-demand mobility service, emissions produced by any “deadhead” miles—vehicle miles traveled without a passenger—are factored into the calculation.

For more details about how we calculate carbon intensity, see our methodology document. Note that significantly lower average fuel economy for vehicles on Uber in Europe versus the US and Canada explain most of the difference in carbon intensity in these 2 geographies. While our fleet composition in Europe is more efficient, with a higher proportion of ZEVs and hybrids, more stringent fuel economy reporting standards in the US also contribute to this discrepancy. Also note that we lack access to sufficient input data to calculate passenger carbon intensity for trips completed in European markets before 2021.

分析と詳細

  • Saving emissions with sustainable routing (2023)

  • ドライバーの電気自動車移行を支援する Uber の取り組み(2022 年)

  • 電動車への公正な移行:Uber と Hertz のパートナーシップによる初期の調査結果(2022 年)

  • Uber が自家用車と根本的に異なる理由(2021 年)

  • (ヨーロッパ各国の首都での)持続可能性の実現に向けた Uber の取り組みの進捗状況(2021 年)

  • 炭素強度の移動度の測定(2019 年)

  • 道路の共有:移動の効率化(2019 年)

1/7

よくある質問

  • Our Climate Assessment and Performance Report provides city officials, environmental advocates, users, and other stakeholders with performance-based metrics on emissions and electrification progress, and efficiency metrics for passenger vehicle trips enabled by the Uber app.

  • The environmental impact of trips completed with Uber’s app matters. It’s our responsibility to report transparently on performance and take action to improve it. Our estimates show that emissions resulting from the use of our platform are the most material component of Uber’s carbon footprint. This report, based on real-world use of our platform, provides greater transparency on our climate impact and helps us improve our efforts to support drivers’ fair transition to ZEVs and reduce emissions resulting from rides.

    You can read our first report (2020) here and our second report (2021) here.

  • Metrics include the following:

    • EV use by drivers on Uber (share of on-trip miles or kilometers completed in ZEVs), which measures our progress toward our goal of 100% zero-emission mobility on Uber globally by 2040
    • Carbon intensity, which measures the emissions resulting from every passenger mile
  • We have bold ambitions to reduce the carbon intensity of and increase the use of zero-emission vehicles for trips facilitated by Uber until we realize a fully zero-tailpipe-emissions mobility platform around the world by 2040. We cannot reach that goal without knowing where we stand today.

  • Rides with the Uber app are one of many transportation options available to people who are looking for a ride. Trip choice depends a lot on various local market conditions. Our analysis of National Household Travel Survey data shows that a higher per-household utilization of the most sustainable transportation modes (transit, walking, and biking) correlates with a higher utilization of ridesharing and other on-demand solutions.

  • Our first report, published in 2020, covered the US and Canada. We added major European markets to our second report, published in 2021. We’re committed to regular reporting on climate emissions and other impact areas resulting from trips on Uber and plan to expand the geographic scope of markets covered in the report over time.

  • We update all metrics at least annually and may update some metrics more frequently, as available. We will release emissions metrics (like passenger carbon intensity) annually, aggregated by calendar year.

  • Uber では、「ゼロエミッション車」(ZEV)という用語をカリフォルニア州大気資源委員会(CARB)や欧州のトランスポート・アンド・エンバイロメント(T&E)と同じ意味で使用しています。具体的には、車載電源から直接 CO2 やその他の基準大気汚染物質(窒素酸化物、粒子状物質、二酸化炭素、硫黄酸化物など)を排出しない自動車を指します。

    Uber のアプリを使用しているドライバーは、現在 2 種類の ZEV を使用しています。バッテリー式電気自動車(バッテリー式 EV)と、まれに水素を燃料とする燃料電池電気自動車(FCEV)です。

    もちろん、ZEV の「ゼロ」とは車の「排気管」からの排出がないことを意味し、車とそのエネルギー源の生産から廃棄に至るまでの排出をすべて計算に入れているわけではありません。一方、すべてを計算に入れた場合、独立した専門家によるライフサイクル分析では、「現在登録されている中型バッテリー EV の平均的な耐用年数における排出量は、同等のガソリン車と比べてヨーロッパではすでに 66%~69%、米国では 60%~68%、中国では 37%~45%、インドでは 19%~34% 減少している」とされています。

  • In June 2023, we announced our first-ever sustainability commitment for our Delivery business (Uber Eats) to reduce unnecessary packaging waste and delivery trip emissions globally to zero by 2030 and 2040, respectively.

    Our Climate Assessment and Performance Report currently covers electrification and emissions metrics only for our Mobility business (ridesharing). We plan to include our Delivery and Freight businesses in this environmental sustainability report in the future.

  • In Uber’s Environmental, Social, and Governance Report, you can find Uber’s emissions breakdown across Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions, all of which have received limited assurance from an independent third party.

This page and the related Climate Assessment and Performance Reports and Environmental, Social, and Governance Reports (“the report”) contain forward-looking statements regarding our future business expectations and goals, which involve risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from the results anticipated. For more information, please see our reports.

*In 2020, we set a goal of reaching 50% of trip kilometers completed in battery EVs in 7 European capitals: Amsterdam, Berlin, Brussels, Lisbon, London, Madrid, and Paris. For this reason, all mentions of “Europe” for the metrics reported here refer to all passenger mobility trips completed in the country-level markets corresponding to these 7 European capitals: the Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, Portugal, the UK, Spain, and France, respectively. Further details can be found in our SPARK! Report.