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Mitigating life cycle GHG emissions of roads to be built through 2030: Case study of a Chinese province. | LitMetric

Mitigating life cycle GHG emissions of roads to be built through 2030: Case study of a Chinese province.

J Environ Manage

State Key Joint Laboratory of Environment Simulation and Pollution Control (SKLESPC), School of Environment, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, China; Tsinghua-Rio Tinto Joint Research Centre for Resources, Energy and Sustainable Development, Beijing, 1000084, China. Electronic address:

Published: October 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The expansion of road networks in China contributes significantly to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, conflicting with the country's goal of carbon neutrality.
  • Comprehensive research combining data from road construction engineers and public sources estimates the life cycle GHG emissions for upcoming road projects in Shandong province to be 147 Mt CO2-eq over the next decade, with the use phase being the largest contributor.
  • Strategies for emission reduction focus on optimizing maintenance, using alternative materials, and promoting electric vehicle adoption, with potential reductions of 11%, 4%-16%, and 2%-6%, respectively, emphasizing the importance of effective road management.

Article Abstract

The expansion of road networks in emerging economies such as China causes significant greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. This development is conflicting with China's commitment to achieve carbon neutrality. Thus, there is a need to better understand life cycle emissions of road infrastructure and opportunities to mitigate these emissions. Existing impact studies of roads in developing countries do not address recycled materials, improved pavement maintenance, or pavement-vehicle interaction and electric vehicle (EV) adoption. Combining firsthand information from Chinese road construction engineers with publicly available data, this paper estimates a comprehensive account of GHG emissions of the road pavement network to be constructed in the next ten years in the Shandong province in Northern China. Further, we estimate the potential of GHG emission reductions achievable under three scenario sets: maintenance optimization, alternative pavement material replacement, and EV adoption. Results show that the life cycle GHG emissions of highways and Class 1-4 roads to be constructed in the next 10 years amount to 147 Mt CO2-eq. Considering the use phase in our model reveals that it is the dominant stage in terms of emissions, largely due to pavement-vehicle interaction. Vehicle electrification can only moderately mitigate these emissions. Other stages, such as materials production and road maintenance and rehabilitation, contribute substantially to GHG emissions as well, highlighting the importance of optimizing the management of these stages. Surprisingly, longer, not shorter maintenance intervals, yield significant emission reductions. Another counter-intuitive finding is that thicker and more material-intensive pavement surfaces cause lower emissions overall. Taken together, optimal maintenance and rehabilitation schedules, alternative material use, and vehicle electrification provide GHG reduction potentials of 11%, 4%-16% and 2%-6%, respectively.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115512DOI Listing

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