2021
DOI: 10.3390/su13063541
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Theoretical Comparison of the Effects of Different Traffic Conditions on Urban Road Environmental External Costs

Abstract: External costs that are associated with air pollution, climate change linked to greenhouse gas emissions (GHG), and noise are among the most important environmental externalities that are generated by road transport, which have been well monetized. This paper theoretically investigates the effects of different traffic conditions on the environmental external costs of urban roads where traffic flow is more complicated than un-interrupted traffic flows. A Monte Carlo method is used to theoretically simulate traf… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Este modelo se usa con el fin de obtener mapas que demuestren la dispersión que tendrá el ruido en la ciudad de Loja, para esto se usa el modelo francés NMPB Routes-08 (Zefreh Torok, 2021), disponible dentro del complemento OpeNoise del programa QGIS. Para la aplicación de este modelo se consideró tráfico vehicular liviano y pesado, velocidad promedio, pendiente y superficie de las carreteras (Calderón et al, 2016).…”
Section: Modelo De Propagación Física (Nmpb Routes-08)unclassified
“…Este modelo se usa con el fin de obtener mapas que demuestren la dispersión que tendrá el ruido en la ciudad de Loja, para esto se usa el modelo francés NMPB Routes-08 (Zefreh Torok, 2021), disponible dentro del complemento OpeNoise del programa QGIS. Para la aplicación de este modelo se consideró tráfico vehicular liviano y pesado, velocidad promedio, pendiente y superficie de las carreteras (Calderón et al, 2016).…”
Section: Modelo De Propagación Física (Nmpb Routes-08)unclassified
“…Nowadays, transport requires 27% of the total energy consumption [1], where 95% is covered with fossil fuels [2]. Transport, however, is responsible for about 22% of the CO 2 emissions, 30% of NO x emissions, and 12% of total particulate matter emissions; thus, this sector can be a strategic intervention point in climate politics [3,4]. Although replacement of diesel and gasoline in mobility is certainly challenging [5,6] due to the consumption of over 70% of the total oil quantity in this field and the low number of appropriate candidates, it has to be noted that fossil fuels are widely used in other sectors, too (33% in transport, 27% in electricity production, 26% in industry, 8% in residential applications, and 6% in commercial use (Figure 1a)), the conversion of which is also demanding [7].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Existing research has highlighted the importance of speed-related indicators in assessing accident severity, gaining consensus among scholars [3] . However, the incorporation of the severity dimension into modeling crash frequency has received relatively less attention [4] .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%