Student & Business Travel
With ~90,000 annual business travel flights and ~100,000 student trips to and from campus each year, campus travelers and aviation partnerships are central to reducing emissions from air travel
Student and business travel account for about 25% of Stanford’s Scope 3 emissions footprint, reflecting the university’s global academic mission and highly mobile community. Travel emissions arise from fossil fuels burned during air, rail, and ground transportation for academic programs, research, conferences, sports, study away, and campus-related mobility.
Stanford is working to reduce the climate impact of these essential activities while preserving access to academic and professional opportunities. For example, Stanford partners with booking platforms to pilot new features such as carbon filters and rail suggestions to enable travelers to more easily integrate sustainable travel options into their journeys. Challenges remain due to limited low-emission travel alternatives, decentralized decision making, and industry-wide constraints such as sustainable aviation fuel availability. Stanford is advancing new research on student travel behavior, developing sustainable travel dashboards, and working with suppliers to accelerate decarbonization across the travel sector. These efforts will support informed decision-making and long-term reductions in Scope 3 travel emissions.
Airport Takeoff: Student-Led Rideshare Options During Peak Departure Times
Organized by Students for a Sustainable Stanford, $5 airport shuttles provide affordable, shared transportation to Bay Area airports during academic breaks. The program offers a practical alternative to single-occupancy car trips and ride-hailing, reducing travel emissions during peak departure periods.
In a given break period in 2025, hundreds of students used the shuttles, with participation spanning both undergraduate and graduate populations. In addition, the program engaged thousands engaging through shuttle reservations or carpool matching. By combining low-cost transit with coordinated ridesharing, the program lowers emissions, improves equity in access to transportation, and demonstrates how student leadership can advance climate-smart travel choices at scale.