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Today's technology could cut road construction emissions in half

And with the right investments, a new study showed we could eliminate them altogether by 2045.

Sean Szymkowski
It all started with Gran Turismo. From those early PlayStation days, Sean was drawn to anything with four wheels. Prior to joining the Roadshow team, he was a freelance contributor for Motor Authority, The Car Connection and Green Car Reports. As for what's in the garage, Sean owns a 2016 Chevrolet SS, and yes, it has Holden badges.
Sean Szymkowski
Road construction

Construction without the emissions? It could happen.

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It's easy to forget that almost every major process in our modern world requires energy, and that includes road construction. Someone has to create the asphalt and concrete, something has to move the materials and it requires energy.

A new study from Chalmers University of Technology and the University of Gothenburg in Sweden highlighted a few areas where we could actually cut emissions from road construction in half. The research focused on a stretch of road in Sweden covering five miles, and every part of the process made its way into a climate-impact calculate. Whether it was the materials or any associated activity, they were included in a total-climate impact.

Ida Karlsson, a PhD student at Chalmers, said research then looked at what alternatives are available today, and found those inputs would reduce emissions by 20% compared to the Swedish Transportation Agency's reference values. But, incorporating more of today's technology could reduce emissions by a total of 50%.

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Karlsson highlighted electric vehicles to transport things between a construction site, recycling and reusing material excavated from a worksite and replacing cement clinker as a binder in concrete. These are things possible today, though the study recognizes each comes with rather large investments.

Looking forward to the future, these areas could help totally eliminate emissions associated with road construction by 2045. When it comes to achieving the UN's recommendation to cut emissions by 7.6% annually to keep the earth's temperature from rising more than 35 degrees Fahrenheit, anything could help.

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