Javascript is required
Search

Acadlore takes over the publication of IJEPM from 2025 Vol. 10, No. 3. The preceding volumes were published under a CC BY 4.0 license by the previous owner, and displayed here as agreed between Acadlore and the previous owner. ✯ : This issue/volume is not published by Acadlore.

Open Access
Research article

Inland Rail Freight Services with Less Fuel and Lower Emissions

Frans Bal1,
Jaap Vleugel2
1
University of Applied Sciences, Utrecht, The Netherlands
2
Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
International Journal of Energy Production and Management
|
Volume 6, Issue 2, 2021
|
Pages 170-180
Received: N/A,
Revised: N/A,
Accepted: N/A,
Available online: N/A
View Full Article|Download PDF

Abstract:

Many countries have enhanced their air quality agenda (NOx, PMx etc.) by a climate change agenda (CO2 etc.). A direct way to lower these emissions is by using less energy (fuel) per activity. One of these activities is freight transport. Transport from supplier to factory relies on efficient and cost-effective means of transport. Road transport (trucking) is usually preferred. But, trucking is still very dependent on fossil fuels. It is also not suitable for bulk transport over longer distances. In areas without suitable waterways, rail is a logical alternative, but is has its own perils. This paper discusses options to make bulk freight services between Germany and France compliant with emission reduction targets. This leads to the main research question: Is it possible to design rail freight routes that reduce fuel use, emissions of CO2, NOx and PM10, while offering competitive transport times? Main rail corridors show signs of congestion and lack of resilience. It is then interesting to research if (dormant) regional/rural, non-electrified, rail tracks could provide capacity and increase resilience of rail services. Such services could also benefit rural economies. A literature study and conversations with a regional expert were used to develop a case study with a rail service using alternative routes. A model was used to estimate the fuel consumption, emissions and trip times of such services. The study indicates that it takes con- certed action to achieve the intended goals.

Keywords: Cross-border, Economics, Emissions, Europe, Evaluation, Freight transport, Logistics, Road, Rail, Policy-making, Simulation


Cite this:
APA Style
IEEE Style
BibTex Style
MLA Style
Chicago Style
GB-T-7714-2015
Bal, F. & Vleugel, J. (2021). Inland Rail Freight Services with Less Fuel and Lower Emissions. Int. J. Energy Prod. Manag., 6(2), 170-180. https://doi.org/10.2495/EQ-V6-N2-170-180
F. Bal and J. Vleugel, "Inland Rail Freight Services with Less Fuel and Lower Emissions," Int. J. Energy Prod. Manag., vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 170-180, 2021. https://doi.org/10.2495/EQ-V6-N2-170-180
@research-article{Bal2021InlandRF,
title={Inland Rail Freight Services with Less Fuel and Lower Emissions},
author={Frans Bal and Jaap Vleugel},
journal={International Journal of Energy Production and Management},
year={2021},
page={170-180},
doi={https://doi.org/10.2495/EQ-V6-N2-170-180}
}
Frans Bal, et al. "Inland Rail Freight Services with Less Fuel and Lower Emissions." International Journal of Energy Production and Management, v 6, pp 170-180. doi: https://doi.org/10.2495/EQ-V6-N2-170-180
Frans Bal and Jaap Vleugel. "Inland Rail Freight Services with Less Fuel and Lower Emissions." International Journal of Energy Production and Management, 6, (2021): 170-180. doi: https://doi.org/10.2495/EQ-V6-N2-170-180
BAL F, VLEUGEL J. Inland Rail Freight Services with Less Fuel and Lower Emissions[J]. International Journal of Energy Production and Management, 2021, 6(2): 170-180. https://doi.org/10.2495/EQ-V6-N2-170-180