When the average American thinks of environmentally friendly industries, the transportation building business does not typically come to mind. But in greater reflection, it really should.
After two centuries of road building, the Federal Highway Administration reports our public roads occupy less than one-half of one percent of the total U.S. land area. That said, leaders in the transportation construction fields undoubtedly respect and recognize the integral role our industry plays in the state of our environment and we are taking action to protect it.
According to Transportation and the Environment: Greener & Cleaner, a report from the American Road and Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA), the oldest and most respected transportation construction-related association in the nation, the transportation construction industry is currently the largest recycler in the world due to the initiatives to reuse construction materials. More than 100 million tons of asphalt used in roadways, runways and parking lots are reclaimed annually.
When it comes to equipment and operations, transportation tools and tactics are more advanced than previous years, allowing for greener and cleaner efficiency. For example, construction contractors are employing emission-smart practices such as using lower-emitting fuels and finding local sources for building materials to cut shipping-related emissions. In fact, a 2009 report from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency states the entire U.S. construction industry, including transportation construction accounts for a mere 1.7 percent of the total greenhouse gas emissions.
While it’s clear we have come a long way, there is undoubtedly more work to be done. In addition to responsible transportation management practices, our national environmental footprint cannot be improved without addressing air quality. Limitless gallons of fuel are wantonly spent by motorists sitting in idle traffic adding extraneous carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. The Unclogging America’s Arteries: Effective Relief for Highways report, released in 2004 by Cambridge Systematics, found real reductions in carbon emissions will come from cutting time traveled in vehicles, not miles traveled. The report’s findings concluded modest traffic flow improvements in the nations more prominent 233 “traffic bottlenecks” would preserve more than 40 billion gallons of fuel over a 20-year span while reducing CO2 emissions by as much as 77 percent.
This information is powerful. By building roads that help reduce the nation’s most troubling traffic bottlenecks, our nation has a chance at an environmental rebirth. Each year, more than 16 million residents, 75 million visitors and 850,000 tons of freight travel on Florida’s highways, roads and streets. In 2008, the American Society of Civil Engineers’ report card for Florida’s transportation infrastructure gave the state’s highways a ‘C’ with drivers in Miami, Orlando and Jacksonville wasting more than 200 million combined hours and nearly 150 million gallons of fuel sitting in traffic, costing more than $3.8 billion to the state’s economy.
We should continue to invest in energy efficient technologies and work plans that keep our environmental footprint at the forefront of all transportation infrastructure decisions. I’m proud of our fellow industries across the nation that continue to move forward to protect and preserve our environment. It is time now for our lawmakers to address the issue at its source.
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
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