Maps and Data - U.S. Vehicles by Transportation Mode
Find maps and charts showing transportation data and trends related to alternative fuels and vehicles.
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119 results
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Laws & Incentives
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Natural Gas Laws and Incentives by State
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Propane Laws and Incentives by State
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Renewable Diesel Laws and Incentives by State
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Clean Cities and Communities
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Clean Cities and Communities Coalition Locations
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Clean Cities and Communities Project Awards and Matching Funds
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Clean Cities and Communities: Vehicles
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Clean Cities and Communities Alternative Fuel Vehicle Inventory
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Clean Cities and Communities Energy Use Impact by AFV Type
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Clean Cities and Communities: Energy Use Impact
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Clean Cities and Communities Annual Energy Use Impact
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Clean Cities and Communities Cumulative Energy Use Impact
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Clean Cities and Communities Energy Use Impact by AFV Type
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Clean Cities and Communities Energy Use Impact by VMT Reduction and FE
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Clean Cities and Communities Energy Use Impact through Idle Reduction
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Regulated Fleets: State & Alt Fuel Providers
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AFV Acquisitions by Regulated Fleets (by Fleet Type)
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AFV Acquisitions by Regulated Fleets (by Fuel Type)
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Annual Vehicle Credits Earned and Used by Regulated Fleets
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Biodiesel Purchases by EPAct-Regulated Fleets
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EPAct State & Alternative Fuel Provider Fleet Exemptions
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Vehicle Credits Traded by Regulated Fleets
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Regulated Fleets: Federal Fleets
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AFV Requirements, Acquisitions, and Credits for Federal Agencies
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U.S. Vehicles by Transportation Mode
Source: U.S. Department of Transportation, Bureau of Transportation Statistics: National Transportation Statistics, Table 1-11: Number of U.S. Aircraft, Vehicles, Vessels, and Other Conveyances.
Notes: Source data reported for 2021. "Medium and heavy trucks and buses" include combination trucks, trucks with two axles and more than six tires, buses, trolley buses, demand response vehicles, and other transit vehicles. "Rail" includes light rail locomotives, Amtrak locomotives, Class I freight cars, and Class I locomotives.
The vast majority (91%) of self-propelled vehicles in the United States are light-duty vehicles. Heavy-duty vehicles and boats account for less than 10%. Trains and planes represent only a tiny fraction of the total, at less than 1% combined.To view more details, notes, and acronyms, please download the Excel spreadsheet.
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