Greenhouse Gas Considerations in Rail Infrastructure in the UK

Abstract

Transportation-related greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions account for an increasing proportion of total emissions in the UK and globally. The provision of rail transit is popularly proposed to reduce transport GHG emissions, but the provision of new infrastructure is itself GHG intensive. Understanding of the GHG emissions impact of rail projects is limited and very few longitudinal studies have been carried out. Existing assessments are often limited both in their scope and the factors considered. A holistic understanding of GHG impacts must include an assessment of capital GHG emissions, operational energy and maintenance as well as an assessment of ridership mode shift and mode share impacts and the relationship between transit infrastructure and land use. This paper explores rail infrastructure projects and their associated GHG emissions. Guidance is given on the aspects of rail planning, design and construction that must be considered to more fully understand the associated GHG impacts.

Publication
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering Sustainability
Gerry Casey
Gerry Casey
Principal Research Fellow, UCL & Associate, Arup

Transport modeller and data scientist building city-scale simulations to help governments and cities make better decisions on transport, climate, and equity.