2017 journal article

Time and cost characterisation of emissions from non-road diesel equipment for infrastructure projects

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE ENGINEERING, 10(2), 123–134.

By: I. Arocho*, W. Rasdorf n, J. Hummer* & P. Lewis *

co-author countries: United States of America πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ
author keywords: Construction equipment; air pollutants; emissions; transportation construction projects; construction emissions; emissions forecasting; construction activities
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

The construction process contributes to pollutant emissions, particularly through the operation of diesel- and gasoline-powered equipment. In the past decade, a series of investigations were undertaken to quantify these emissions for a variety of non-road construction equipment performing different activities and undergoing different duty cycles, and a model to estimate quantities of six types of pollutant was developed. This paper uses that model to estimate emissions for four street and utility construction projects which no one has done previously. We combined information from company records with standard construction industry manuals to estimate total emissions for the projects and to examine the pollution patterns and magnitudes. The street construction projects all had similar emission profiles with a large peak at the beginning and a steady output of emissions throughout the duration of the project. For example, in two of the projects studied, half of all CO2 emissions were produced before the projects were 40% completed. Results showed that demolition and earthwork are the activities with the largest contribution. The equipment types with the largest contribution are backhoes, front-end loaders, bulldozers and trenchers. Trenchers, for example, produced 30% of all emissions on the projects on which they were used.