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Greening the Big Brown Land Tackling Australia’s transport carbon footprint.

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Presentation on theme: "Greening the Big Brown Land Tackling Australia’s transport carbon footprint."— Presentation transcript:

1 Greening the Big Brown Land Tackling Australia’s transport carbon footprint

2 www.arrb.com.au 2 This presentation ARRB Group Australian greenhouse gas emissions Approaches to reduce carbon emissions in the land transport sector

3 ARRB Group Ltd Company Overview

4 www.arrb.com.au 4 Our company ARRB Group is a leading provider of value-added research, consulting and technology addressing transport problems. Established 1960 as the Australian Road Research Board Public company whose members are federal, state and local government authorities in Australia and New Zealand

5 www.arrb.com.au 5 Our knowledge and experience Our purpose: Collaborating with the road industry to turn knowledge into practice International reputation for innovation, independence, scientific integrity and professional excellence Highly qualified and experienced research professionals and specialist technical and support staff NATA certified laboratory and testing facilities National network of offices International agents and business links

6 www.arrb.com.au 6 Our business operations Research - our founding purpose was to conduct public interest research, and this endeavour continues in ARRB Research. Consulting - provides a fully commercial range of professional services to the roads, transport, planning, infrastructure sectors. Technology - a commercially competitive division. Competes on the worldwide market as a developer of innovative road, traffic and transport products.

7 www.arrb.com.au 7 Research Investing in research ensures that ARRB will be a source of expertise and knowledge into the future

8 www.arrb.com.au 8 Research Initial focus on materials and road pavement design. Now a multi-disciplinary approach to transportation research ARRB Research operates as a not-for-profit entity Expertise in the following areas: – bituminous surfacings and pavement materials – asset management – road safety engineering – transport economics and evaluation – concrete technology.

9 www.arrb.com.au 9 Consulting International reputation for innovation, independence, scientific integrity and professional excellence

10 www.arrb.com.au 10 Consulting Providing a total commercial service across a wide variety of disciplines ARRB Consulting capabilities include: – transport policy, parking, and management – road asset management services – pavements and materials services – vehicle dynamics: simulation and testing – road data collection services – road safety and traffic engineering – training programs and capacity building – crash investigation and analysis – software tools and other products

11 www.arrb.com.au 11 Technology Developing innovative road, traffic and transport products utilising the latest technologies

12 www.arrb.com.au 12 Technology State-of-the-art products utilising the latest technologies Designed and manufactured in Australia to meet international standards Main areas of product development include: – pavement profiling systems – digital imaging systems – road geometry and mapping systems – network survey vehicles – software tools – traffic information systems

13 www.arrb.com.au 13 ARRB Group Offices Headquarters – Melbourne, Australia Regional offices in Sydney, Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide International support offices include: China (ARRB China) Europe (Grontmij | Carlbro) Thailand (STS Instruments) India (Taisei International) U.S.A (Humboldt)

14 Australian Greenhouse Gas Emissions Approaches to reduce emissions for land transport

15 www.arrb.com.au 15 Australian Greenhouse Gas Emissions (2005 figures) Total Australian GGE = 510 million tons of CO 2 equivalent (CO 2 e) Road transport = 71 million tons (14%) Transport second highest after power generation and marginally higher than agriculture 71 Mt x A$30 per ton = A$2bn per annum – A$30/t is looking a bit light; EU use €40 = A$120 – commercial vehicles 23Mt per annum – light motor vehicles 48Mt per annum – average Australian car 3.5t per annum

16 www.arrb.com.au 16 Australian Government policy Newly formed Department of Climate Change Overlap with Department of Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts Committed to an emissions trading scheme (ETS) by 2010 The rest – (!!!) - is still being debated At present, the tendency is to follow European models in climate change matters President Obama’s green agenda may provide an alternative model

17 www.arrb.com.au 17 In the absence of policy….. Can still develop technical strategies/ technologies that will help, regardless of policy There are primarily three major approaches open for the land transport sector: 1.shift to more carbon efficient fuel/engine systems for future motor vehicles 2.reduce the carbon emission levels of specific transport tasks 3.making more carbon-efficient use of resources in providing and maintaining transport infrastructure

18 www.arrb.com.au 18 1.Carbon efficient fuel/engine systems Future Fuels Forum – A CSIRO-led partnership in strategic analysis of the future fuel mix in Australia – Fuel for thought was released 11 th July 2008 - future scenarios - most likely drivers of change - challenges/ barriers to change

19 www.arrb.com.au 19 The transport sector will have the hardest job… Proportional targets and relative contributions of the electricity and transport sectors (emissions target 95% below 2000 levels by 2050) 1. carbon efficient fuel/engine systems

20 www.arrb.com.au 20 Vehicle kilometres travelled by engine type 1. carbon efficient fuel/engine systems

21 www.arrb.com.au 21 2. Reducing carbon emissions from specific transport tasks Congestion reduction/ITS – – national priority area in transport policy Logistics planning/real-time onboard systems – high interest to private sector logistics/freight companies Town and regional planning – planning efficient transport from the start – preserve of State (not Federal) governments – constrained by existing settlement patterns

22 www.arrb.com.au 22 3. Reducing the carbon demand of infrastructure: carbon neutral construction 3. carbon-efficient use of resources

23 www.arrb.com.au 23 Carbon neutral road construction - a pilot project Aim: to reduce the impact of road construction on the environment Approach: measure the carbon footprint then reduce and offset the carbon emissions

24 www.arrb.com.au 24 Carbon offsets… 2.4 km Mickleham Rd duplication construction carbon footprint was 1,750 t project was made ‘carbon neutral’ GGE offset involved purchase of carbon credits – 4,500 trees were planted

25 www.arrb.com.au 25 Breakdown of embodied greenhouse gas emissions….. 73% from embodied greenhouse gas 24% from on-site transport 2% transport of materials on site 1% on-site electricity cement treated crushed rock 29% aggregate/base 21% 7% hot mix asphalt 37% concrete 2% other steel (gantries, road barriers, wire rope, steel poles) 4% steel reinforcement

26 www.arrb.com.au 26 Identify greenhouse emissions generated from: – on-site electricity – transport of materials supplied to site – on-site transport – embodied energy of materials - (energy generated from production of materials such as concrete, crushed rock, steel and asphalt) Eg: 1 tonne = ave. 3 tonnes of embodied gas emission a framework to calculate gas emission from road construction has been developed by VicRoads. Calculation of the carbon footprint …

27 www.arrb.com.au 27 The way forward… other VicRoads initiatives include using: – energy efficient traffic signals – 40% more efficient – trials of emerging technologies for street lighting – use of solar panels – for power generation – eco office – improve office energy efficiency – greening the vehicle fleet - improve vehicle emission standards

28 www.arrb.com.au 28 3. Reducing the carbon demand of infrastructure Material selection – embedded energy considerations - untreated basecourse low carbon footprint for placement - concrete or cemented materials high – placement considerations - frequent activity = low carbon footprint, often - less frequent activity = high carbon footprint activity less often Street lighting and roadway/lane delineation – alternative energy eg: solar energy The road surface as a solar collector?? 3. carbon-efficient use of resources

29 www.arrb.com.au 29 3.Reducing the carbon demand of infrastructure - assessment of recycled materials 3. carbon-efficient use of resources

30 www.arrb.com.au 30 3.Reducing the carbon demand of infrastructure - performance of recycled materials - research 3. carbon-efficient use of resources Accelerated Loading Facility (ALF) Full scale accelerated pavement testing

31 www.arrb.com.au 31 3.Reducing the carbon demand of infrastructure - performance of recycled materials - research 3. carbon-efficient use of resources

32 www.arrb.com.au 32 Use of Alternative Materials

33 www.arrb.com.au 33 What is ARRB doing in amongst all this? Strategic – low carbon transport forum – partnership ARRB, BITRE, CSIRO and DCC – assessing the knowledge needed to make technical strategies viable Program/project activities: – national research programs in asset management, pavements, surfacings for Austroads – high level consulting e.g. - climate change frameworks for some States - working with several states on congestion issues – getting our own ‘greenhouse’ in order! (ARRB’s carbon footprint)


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