East Asia has lowest car utilization, highest public transportation utilization. North America has highest car utilization and lowest public transportation utilization.
It's the privilege of the imperial core that mediocre people with pale skin get to waste immense resources riding around in giant cages with a few sofas, HVAC, entertainment system, a few tons of metal, chemicals, rubber, etc.
It's not surprise that empire is constantly attacking people and stealing their resources around the globe.
The sad part is that EVs are presented as the path forward when it's just a continuation of car dominance, dependency, destruction, violence, waste, etc.
It looks like the data is taken from cities alone, which could skew the numbers a little, depending on how much of the population lives outside cities (and how they define what a city is).
A lot of people hate on modern Arab cities, but they aren't as bad as they may seem. Cities are divided into districts, and each district is more or less self sufficient: bakeries, barber shops, supermarkets, schools, mosques, soccer fields, restaurants, banks, hotels, ... So as child with a bicycle I can reach everywhere I needed to go. It is when moving between districts that it can get tricky since you will have to cross fast moving stroads or highways.
North America makes its cities catered to cars rather than people and then people spread out into suburbs. Then North Americans say they can't make the cities suck less because the people are too spread out.
If you compare the population densities of mid-sized American cities, they're not really all that different from Dutch cities that are famed for their bike, public transit, and pedestrian infrastructure. In fact, a lot of cities in the Netherlands as recently as the 70s looked like any old town USA with a bunch of mid-rises choked with cars going down the street. It was, AFAIK, about 20 years of consistent policy choices that changed it to the public transit mothership it is today.
What I mean to say is that our urban design is terrible. It didn't used to be, and it's an issue that impacts a lot of aspects of life in even smaller cities, not least of which is that it makes it far more expensive both for you and the city. We've arrived here by decades of consistent policy choices prioritizing cars over people, and we can get out of it through policy choices, too.
How to say you're an ignorant American who's never seen a map in his life. China alone is 2.2% bigger than the US and has the biggest high speed rail network in the world.