Just a few years ago, electric buses routinely faltered in cold conditions, reinforcing doubts about whether they could replace diesel and natural gas-burning fleets in northern cities. Now, with better batteries and strategically placed chargers, Madison is at the forefront of a small but growing number of cities testing whether those doubts still hold. Making the technology work through a long Midwestern winter could reshape how others approach electrification. Some 3.6 million commuters nationwide rely on buses to get around. With transportation accounting for roughly 28 percent of the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions, transit agencies are looking for alternatives to polluting machinery that creates a particular health risk around bus stops.


Having more public transport and especially more electrified public transport would definitely help with that. I still don’t really know what you’re getting at here.
Removing the 57% of transportation emissions from individualized transit is more important than the <2% from public transit.
Not that we can’t do both, just where priorities and performance measures should lie.