4.8 Article

Material Stock and Embodied Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Global and Urban Road Pavement

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 24, Pages 18050-18059

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c05255

Keywords

anthropogenic material stock; built environment; road; pavement; transport infrastructure; urban areas; resource use; bottom-up approach

Funding

  1. Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
  2. Research Council of Norway [300330 SHAPE, 257660 FME ZEN]
  3. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada [DGECR-2018-00091]

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This study assesses the global road material stock and the emissions associated with materials' production, revealing significant variations in road material stock among regions and cities. The findings highlight the importance of controlling urban expansion and serve as a basis for further research into infrastructure resource management.
Roads play a key role in movements of goods and people but require large amounts of materials emitting greenhouse gases to be produced. This study assesses the global road material stock and the emissions associated with materials' production. Our bottom-up approach combines georeferenced paved road segments with road length statistics and archetypical geometric character-istics of roads. We estimate road material stock to be of 254 Gt. If we were to build these roads anew, raw material production would emit 8.4 GtCO2-eq. Per capita stocks range from 0.2 t/cap in Chad to 283 t/cap in Iceland, with a median of 20.6 t/cap. If the average per capita stock in Africa was to reach the current European level, 166 Gt of road materials, equivalent to the road material stock in North America and in East and South Asia, would be consumed. At the urban scale, road material stock increases with the urban area, population density, and GDP per capita, emphasizing the need for containing urban expansion. Our study highlights the challenges in estimating road material stock and serves as a basis for further research into infrastructure resource management.

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