The Green Initiative
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SuperShuttle San Fernando Valley, BlackCar LA, San Gabriel Transit and G & S transportation services have combined their efforts to foster a green initiative program to help protect our environment. Our green program encompasses eco-friendly vehicles in Los Angeles and surrounding cities and shared-ride airport & city transportation to enhance green travel.
Our eco friendly vehicles cover 40% of our fleet which are comprised of CNG and Hybrid vehicles. Our goal is to limit our impact on the environment by gradually lowering our carbon footprint. We hope one day to replace all of our fleet including sedans, limousines, mini-buses and coaches to environment friendly vehicles.
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Hybrid Cars

CNG CabsCNG Vans


SuperShuttle is the nation’s leader in shared-ride airport shuttle service, providing door-to-door ground transportation to more than 8 million passengers per year at 33 airports in over 50 US cities and surrounding communities. By providing Shared-Ride service, we are offering an alternative environment friendly service to the airport. Our green conscious customers can now make their green travel complete by using our service. By sharing a ride to the airport you are contributing to reducing traffic, lowering gas emissions and air pollution. If everyone chose to share a ride to the airport, we would find a healthier, happier city.
What is Ridesharing?
A form of transportation in which more than one person shares the use of a vehicle to make a trip. People share the use of a car by Car pooling, Van pooling or using public transit to commute to and from work. Supershuttle complements green travel by offering shared ride services to passengers traveling to major public airports, private airports, harbors and train stations.
There are millions of people across America that travel daily to the airport. In Los Angeles alone 170,000 passengers commute daily to LAX airport. Passengers can now lower their carbon footprint and incorporate green travel by sharing a ride to the airport. Whether traveling by airplane, ship or train, you can now share a ride to your port with SuperShuttle.
Why Ride Share?
An Environmentally-Healthy Alternative
Every Ridesharing trip means fewer motor vehicles on the road. Fewer vehicles means less pollution, cleaner air to breathe and reduced greenhouse gas emissions.
An Energy Saving Alternative
Ridesharing activities can result in reducing the amount of fuel we consume, reducing our dependence on foreign oil and the likelihood of another energy crisis.
A Healthy Alternative
Share a ride to the Airport. Sharing your commute is good for your health. Studies show that solo drivers are more likely to have higher blood pressure and heart rates, lowered body tolerance and even short-term memory loss as a result of the stress and tension of driving in stop-and-go traffic day after day.
Travel time is more relaxed. By not having to concentrate on driving in traffic, you are free to read, catch up on work, take a nap, or do absolutely nothing but enjoy the ride!
A Cost Saving Alternative
The more you rideshare, the greater the savings. The cost of sharing a ride is much less than a taxi or hiring a car.
Ridesharing also helps the business environment. Traffic congestion can waste energy; delay the delivery of goods and services; result in employee tardiness; create stress; pollute the air and raise the cost of both living and doing business in our County.
A Ridesharing Alternative
Ridesharing can make a difference in reducing traffic congestion. Every carpool can mean from 1-4 less cars on the road. Each vanpool can remove 6-14 cars.
10 Tips on Going Green
Change a Light Bulb
Installing a compact fluorescent bulb (CFL) is the quickest, easiest way to save energy -- and money. Unlike incandescent, CFLs convert most of the energy they use into light rather than heat.
Good for You: They consume about 75 percent less electricity and last up to 10 times longer (10,000 hours as opposed to 1,500). Replace one 75-watt incandescent bulb with a 25-watt CFL and save up to $83 over the life of the bulb
Unplug Things That Glow
Anything that has an LED (light emitting diode) that glows even after you turn it off continues to draw power (that you pay for). Your TV, cell phone charger, and printer are likely culprits. Unplug the offenders from wall sockets and plug them into power strips instead. When you leave a room, flip the strip switch to cut the flow of electricity.
Good for You: Unplug appliances and electronics that glow and you could save $200 a year.
Information provided by imaniceperson.com
Recycle Your Electronics
Americans tossed out a whopping 5.5 billion pounds of electronics -- TVs, stereos, cell phones, and computers -- in 2005, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. The result? Millions of pounds of chemicals and heavy metals ended up in the ground even though it's easier than ever to recycle electronics. The Consumer Electronics Association created mygreenelectronics.org to help people find a recycling resource in their area. The site also provides a list of electronics, from laptops to baby monitors, that are easier on the environment and your energy bill.
Good for You: The average American household has three cell phones stashed in a drawer. Sell unused cell phones to greenphone.com. You'll receive about $35, and the phones will be refurbished and resold. If 1 million people recycled one cathode-ray tube TV this year, we'd keep 4 million pounds of lead out of the ground.
Audit Your Energy
It's easier to save energy when you know exactly how much and where you're using it. Investing in a home audit takes a couple of hours and pays off with a list of things you can do to curb consumption. Find an auditor through your utility company (at low or no cost), or hire one ($450-$650). A list of auditors certified by the nonprofit Residential Energy Services Network, is at resnet.us (click on Consumer Information).
Good for You: On average, an energy audit shows how to save up to 30 percent on utility bills
Support Local Farmers
If your food could talk, it would tell quite a tale. Typical grocery store produce travels nearly 1,500 miles before it ends up on your plate. All this traveling burns fossil fuels and results in carbon emissions -- a fancy term for pollution. Buying from local farmers means you're not only getting the freshest food possible, you're saving energy.
Good for You: To find farmers nationwide, visit localharvest.org, sustainabletable.org, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture at www.ams.usda.govfarmersmarkets/map.htm
Fix That Drip
When you next fill your water glass, think about this: We each use about 100 gallons a day, enough to fill 1,600 glasses. Household water consumption has increased by 200 percent since 1950, even though the population has grown by only 90 percent. As a result, more than 36 states are expected to face water shortages in the next six years. Stemming the flow is as easy as fixing a leaky faucet or toilet; a dripping faucet can waste up to 74 gallons a day, a leaking toilet up to 200 gallons a day. Another way to save water is to turn off the faucet when brushing your teeth except for initial toothbrush prep and rinsing. Many of us run the faucet the entire time we are brushing our teeth. This can waste 1-3 gallons every time we brush. Also Use cold water instead of hot: This saves water and energy. It can take 2-3 gallons of water to get the hot water from the water heater to the faucet. If you don't need hot/warm water, don't use it.
Good for You: Repair a leaky toilet and you can save $30 a year, which may not sound like much until you realize it means 73,000 gallons.
Let Your Grass Grow
Spending less time tending to your lawn actually makes it greener -- in every sense of the word. Most grass species fare best when they're kept at least 2 1/2 inches tall. The length creates more surface area to absorb sunlight, which creates thicker turf and deeper roots, which means you won't need to water as often.
Good for You: Save money by letting grass clippings remain on your lawn; it adds nitrogen to the soil and discourages weed seeds from germinating. You'll need less fertilizer and herbicide. Plus, leaving clippings on lawns means less in landfills; in 2005 Americans disposed of more than 12 million tons of yard waste
Look for the Label
When it's time to replace a household appliance, choose a product with an Energy Star label. Sponsored by the EPA and the Department of Energy, the Energy Star program rates products from light bulbs to kitchen appliances. Energy Star labels guarantee that products are energy-efficient. For example, a battery charger labeled with the Energy Star logo will use 35 percent less energy than a standard one. You may even be eligible for a tax credit when you purchase an Energy Star product. Information at energystar.gov.
Good for You: A household with Energy Star products uses about 30 percent less energy than the average household -- an annual savings of about $570.
Do Full Loads
Whenever you wash just a few clothes or dishes at a time rather than waiting for a full load to accumulate, you're wasting water, power, and money. The average American family of four washes about 540 loads of laundry a year, which consumes up to 21,000 gallons of water, and more than 150 loads of dishes, which uses about 1,500 gallons. Most of the energy consumed by washers goes toward heating the water -- about 90 percent in the clothes washer and 80 percent in the dishwasher. Combining half-loads, choosing short cycles, and using cold or warm rather than hot water in the clothes washer racks up savings.
Good for You: Wash two fewer loads of clothes and one fewer load of dishes a week and save up to 4,500 gallons of water a year.
Work the Critters
Your backyard ecosystem is as intricate as any wild patch of land, and it pays in many ways to enlist its creatures on your side. Birds eat many insects; they just need a water source and trees and shrubs for cover and nesting. Many insects are beautiful -- and beneficial. Ladybugs aren't just cute; they are voracious eaters of aphids.
Good for You: To understand which backyard insects are garden friends, visit garden.org and click on Pest Control Library for photos.
Information provided by Better Homes & Gardens, LOTMA
