Carbon Footprint Assessment in Road Construction Projects: Methods for Reducing Emissions
道路建設プロジェクトにおけるカーボンフットプリント評価:排出削減のための方法 (AI 翻訳)
Lakmal Madushanka Mudalige Kammangoda Mudalige
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
スリランカとイタリアの道路建設プロジェクトを比較し、ISO 14044準拠のLCA手法でカーボンフットプリントを定量化。スリランカの炭素強度が高い原因はRAP使用率の低さや電源構成の差にあると特定し、WMA導入やRAP増加などの削減策を提案。再現可能な枠組みを提供。
English
This study performs a comparative LCA of road construction in Sri Lanka and Italy following ISO 14044. Results show Sri Lanka has higher carbon intensity due to low RAP use and carbon-intensive grid. It proposes mitigation strategies like warm mix asphalt and increased recycled materials, offering a reproducible framework for developing countries.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本では道路建設におけるLCA手法が確立されているが、開発途上国向けの実践的枠組みとして参考になる。特にアジア地域でのインフラ排出削減に貢献可能。
In the global GX context
This paper provides a standardized LCA methodology for road construction, relevant for global infrastructure decarbonization. The comparison between a developing and developed country context offers insights for applying similar frameworks under diverse conditions, supporting alignment with Paris Agreement goals.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Provides a reproducible LCA framework for road construction and identifies key parameters driving emissions in tropical contexts.
🏢実務担当者:Offers evidence-based emission reduction strategies (e.g., RAP use, warm mix asphalt) that can be adopted by road authorities.
🏛政策担当者:Highlights policy levers to reduce construction emissions, especially in developing countries, supporting NDC implementation.
📄 Abstract(原文)
Road construction represents a significant contributor to global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, yet standardised methodologies for quantifying and reducing these impacts remain underdeveloped in developing-country contexts, particularly in South Asia. This study aims to quantify the carbon footprint of road construction and identify technically and economically feasible emission reduction strategies through a comparative Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of two infrastructure projects — the Outer Circular Highway (E02) in Sri Lanka and the A3 Motorway (Salerno–Reggio Calabria) in Italy — conducted using SimaPro software with the Ecoinvent v3 database, strictly following the four mandatory phases prescribed by ISO 14044. In the goal and scope definition phase, the functional unit is established as one kilometre of a standard two-lane road, and the system boundary is defined as cradle-to-gate, encompassing raw material extraction (A1), transport to manufacturer (A2), material production (A3), transport to construction site (A4), and on-site construction activities (A5). In the life cycle inventory (LCI) phase, material quantities, transport distances, and construction equipment fuel consumption data are compiled from project documentation, published LCA studies, and semi-structured stakeholder interviews; where Ecoinvent v3 datasets do not adequately represent Sri Lankan conditions, process-level adaptations are applied to reflect the local electricity grid composition, cement production characteristics, and regional supply chain distances. In the life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) phase, the IPCC 2021 GWP 100-year characterisation method is applied, expressing results in kg CO₂-equivalent per kilometre, complemented by the ReCiPe 2016 midpoint approach for additional impact categories. In the interpretation phase, Monte Carlo simulation and one-at-a-time sensitivity analysis quantify result uncertainty and identify the most influential parameters, while scenario analysis systematically evaluates emission reduction interventions including warm mix asphalt adoption, increased Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement (RAP) incorporation, local material sourcing optimisation, and construction equipment modernisation. Preliminary SimaPro modelling indicates significantly higher carbon intensity in the Sri Lankan case, attributable principally to near-absent RAP use (below 5 % versus 20–40 % in Italy), greater reliance on virgin construction materials, and a more carbon-intensive electricity grid. The study delivers a reproducible, ISO 14044-compliant methodological framework for carbon footprint assessment in tropical road construction, providing evidence-based guidance for Sri Lanka’s Road Development Authority and analogous institutions across South Asia in meeting national climate commitments under the Paris Agreement.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- crossref https://doi.org/10.7250/conect.2026.071first seen 2026-05-14 23:09:27
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