Title of article :
New Zealand traffic and local air quality
Author/Authors :
Paul Irvinga، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , Ian Moncrieff b، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Since 1996 the New Zealand Ministry of Transport (MOT) has been investigating the effects of road transport on local
air quality. The outcome has been the government’s Vehicle Fleet Emissions Control Strategy (VFECS). This is a
programme of measures designed to assist with the improvement in local air quality, and especially in the appropriate
management of transport sector emissions. Key to the VFECS has been the development of tools to assess and predict the
contribution of vehicle emissions to local air pollution, in a given urban situation. Determining how vehicles behave as an
emissions source, and more importantly, how the combined traffic flows contribute to the total emissions within a given
airshed location was an important element of the programme. The actual emissions output of a vehicle is more than that
determined by a certified emission standard, at the point of manufacture. It is the engine technology’s general performance
capability, in conjunction with the local driving conditions, that determines its actual emissions output. As vehicles are a
mobile emissions source, to understand the effect of vehicle technology, it is necessary to work with the average fleet
performance, or ‘‘fleet-weighted average emissions rate’’. This is the unit measure of performance of the general traffic flow
that could be passing through a given road corridor or network, as an average, over time. The flow composition can be
representative of the national fleet population, but also may feature particular vehicle types in a given locality, thereby have
a different emissions ‘signature’. A summary of the range of work that has been completed as part of the VFECS
programme is provided. The NZ Vehicle Fleet Emissions Model and the derived data set available in the NZ Traffic
Emission Rates provide a significant step forward in the consistent analysis of practical, sustainable vehicle emissions policy
and air-quality management in New Zealand.
Keywords :
vehicle emissions , Pollution , Air quality , New Zealand , Environmental capacity , policy
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment