Transport Ecology
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Transport ecology is the science of the human-transport-environment system. There are two chairs of transport ecology in Germany, in Dresden and Karlsruhe.


Vocabulary

Mobility is about satisfying the need to travel. To achieve mobility, means of transport are needed.. Mobility corresponds to the human need to travel - recognised by article 13 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights - while transport is a means of achieving mobility. In public debate, mobility is often confused with transport. The "Dresden Declaration" calls for people's mobility needs to be met in a cost-effective and environmental-friendly way..


Suggested measures

Then the proposed measures (whether they involve transport modes, the concept of "traffic avoidance, change of transport mode, technical improvements", the tautology of transport ecology or the "4 E", i.e. Enforcement, Education, Engineering, Economy/Encouragement) are scrutinised for transparency, fairness (polluters pay), unwanted side-effects and the application of the measure ("are there other examples of application elsewhere? ").


Traffic avoidance, modal shift and finally technical improvements

The concept of « traffic avoidance, modal shift and technical improvements » involves firstly reducing the volume of transport, then promoting intermodality and finally making technical improvements to vehicles and making the energy they consume sustainable.. This means in fact implementing the Kaya identity applied to transport (see below).


Enforcement, Education, Engineering, Economy/Encouragement

These methods are also known as "4E". ''Enforcement'' refers to measures of order, whether obligations or prohibitions. ''Education'' refers to training, communication. ''Engineering'' is of a purely technical nature, whereas ''Economy/Encouragement'' re incentive systems, which may well be financial.


Tautology of transport ecology

As long as pollution is proportional to the distance travelled, Udo Becker defines tautology of transport ecology (in German « verkehrsökologische Tautologie ») as follows :. :pollution = D \times \frac \times \frac with : * pollution : pollution ; * D : Transportation demand (in passenger-km) ; * C : vehicle traffic (in vehicle-km) : * \frac : inverse of vehicle occupancy (in vehicle-km per passenger-km) ; * \frac is pollution per vehicle-km. Demand can be decomposed according to: :D= Population \times \frac \times \frac with : * Population : population ; * \frac : number of journeys per person; * \frac : mean distance of a journey. Pollution can therefore be expressed as the sum of pollution according to the modes of transport : :pollution = D \times \sum \frac \times \frac \times \frac with : * \frac : Modal shift (dimensionless quantity) ; * \frac : inverse of occupancy according to the mode of transport (in vehicle-km per passenger-km) ; * \frac is the pollution per vehicle-km according to the mode of transport.


Kaya identity applied to transport

The general formulation takes on a more specific form when it comes to decarbonising transport, following
Kaya identity The Kaya identity is a mathematical identity stating that the total emission level of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide can be expressed as the product of four factors: human population, GDP per capita, energy intensity (per unit of GDP), and car ...
. Pollution being identified to CO2 \frac is replaced by \frac \times \frac
with : * \frac : inverse of efficiency according to the mode of transport (for instance in kWh/100 km per vehicle) ; * \frac : carbon intensity of the energy according to the mode of transport (for instance in g CO2 eq./kWh). CO2 emissions can be decomposed according:. :CO_2 = D \times \sum \frac \times \frac \times \frac \times \frac


See also

*
Green transport hierarchy The green transport hierarchy (Canada), also called mobility pyramid, reverse traffic pyramid, street user hierarchy (US), sustainable transport hierarchy (Wales), urban transport hierarchy or road user hierarchy (Australia, UK) is a hierarchy of ...
* Health and environmental impact of transport


References

{{Reflist


External links


Chair of transport ecology
Dresden University of Technology TU Dresden (for , abbreviated as TUD), also as the Dresden University of Technology, is a public research university in Dresden, Germany. It is the largest institute of higher education in the city of Dresden, the largest university in Saxony a ...

Institute for Transport Systems & Infrastructure
Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences Sustainable transport