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We can’t
see it. We can’t smell it. But air quality can have a significant
impact on the transportation planning process. This issue will try to
provide readers with a basic understanding of air quality.
What types of pollution affect transportation
planning for the Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO)?
The following pollutants are of primary concern to Transportation
Planning:
- Carbon Monoxide (CO): A colorless, odorless, tasteless
gas formed in large part by incomplete combustion of fuel. Human activities
(i.e., transportation or industrial processes) are largely the source
for Carbon Monoxide production.
- Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs): A byproduct of
fossil fuel combustion, which, when combined with Nitrogen Oxides and
exposed to heat from sunlight, produces ozone.
- Nitrogen Oxides (NOx): A byproduct of fossil fuel
combustion, which when combined with Volatile Organic Compounds and
heat from sunlight, produces ozone.
- Ozone (O3): A colorless gas with a sweet odor. Ozone
is not a direct emission from transportation sources. It is a secondary
pollutant formed when VOCs and NOx combine in the presence of sunlight.
Ozone is associated with smog or haze conditions. Although the ozone
in the upper atmosphere protects us from harmful ultraviolet rays, ground-level
ozone produces an unhealthy environment in which to live.
What is Conformity?
Conformity is the process of assessing the compliance
of any transportation plan, program or project with air quality implementation
plans. It is a way to ensure that Federal funding and approval are given
to those transportation plans that are consistent with air quality goals.
According to the Clean Air Act of 1991, transportation plans cannot:
- Create new violations of the Federal air quality standards.
- Increase the frequency or severity of existing violation
of the standards.
- Delay attainment of standards.
Because driving is so closely linked to air pollution,
federal law requires the High Point Urban Area’s Long Range Transportation
Plan to support the goals of North Carolina’s air quality plans.
Without this “conformity”, the urban area risks losing its
federal transportation funds.
How does
Conformity affect the MPO?
Under
the Clean Air Act, States and MPOs must demonstrate, through the conformity
process, that the transportation investments, strategies and programs
they choose, taken as a whole, have air quality impacts consistent with
those contained in the State Implementation Plans (SIP) for achieving
the National Ambient Air Quality Standards.
If a transportation
plan, program, or project does not meet conformity requirements, transportation
officials have the following options:
- Modify the plan,
program, or project to offset the expected emissions.
- Work with the
appropriate State agency to modify the SIP to offset the plan, program,
or project emissions.
If the above is not
accomplished, and if a conformity determination cannot be made within
certain time frames after amending the SIP, or if three years passes since
the last conformity determination, a conformity lapse occurs and no new
projects may advance until a new determination for the plan and Transportation
Improvement Program (TIP) can be made.
What triggers
a Conformity Analysis?
The following actions
initiate the need for a Conformity Analysis:
- Establishment
or Revision of the Emissions Budget. The State or Federal Government
determines this need.
- Long Range Transportation
Plan adoption or amendment
- Establishment
or revision of Traffic Control Measures.
- For maintenance
areas, a Conformity Analysis is required every three (3) years.
In short, a new analysis
is required whenever the transportation plan adds a project, deletes a
project, significantly delays or accelerates a project, or changes the
project scope.
What variables
are considered when determining conformity?
Emission rate models (often referred to as the Mobile models) are used
to estimate emissions for the area, taking into consideration factors
such as the mix of vehicle types, temperature, etc. These rates are then
applied to the vehicle miles traveled and speed estimates from the travel
demand model to calculate motor vehicle emissions rates.
How do emission
levels determine the classification of urban areas in reference to air
quality?
Based on the air quality monitoring results, the area can be
classified into the following categories.
- Attainment Area:
An area considered to have air quality that meets or exceeds the United
States Environmental Protection Agency’s health standards used
in the Clean Air Act. An area may be an attainment area for one pollutant
and a nonattainment area for others.
- Nonattainment Area:
Any geographic region of the United States that has been designated
as nonattainment for any pollutant for which a National Ambient Air
Quality Standard (NAAQS) exists. The nonattainment designation identifies
the area as an area where pollution levels have exceeded those standards
prescribed by the EPA. The designation requires that those areas designated
as such implement strategies to improve air quality or risk losing funding.
- Maintenance Area:
Any geographic region of the United States previously designated nonattainment
pursuant to the Clean Air Act amendments of 1990 and subsequently redesignated
to attainment subject to requirement to develop a maintenance plan.
Guilford and Davidson
Counties were originally declared nonattainment for ozone (O3) on January
6, 1992. At that time, Guilford and Davidson Counties were classified
as moderate nonattainment. On November 8, 1993, both counties were redesignated
to maintenance for ozone.
What options
are available to improve air quality?
These options are often referred to as Transportation Control
Measures (TCMs). Funds are available from the State and Federal government
to aid in the implementation of these strategies. Below is a list of traffic
control measures and cost effective transportation strategies.
- Bike / Pedestrian
Improvements
- Reformulated Gasoline
- Inspection and
Maintenance Programs
- Ridesharing
- Parking Pricing
- Signal Timing
- High Occupancy
Vehicle (HOV) Lanes
- Park / Ride Lots
- Transit Improvement
Why are these
options necessary?
Each of today’s cars produces 60 to 80 percent less pollution than
cars in the 1960s. However, more people are making more vehicle trips.
In 1970, Americans traveled 1 trillion miles in motor vehicles, and that
was projected to increase to 4 trillion miles per year by the year 2000.
Transportation options are the most effective means of reducing vehicle
miles traveled, congestion, and pollution.
Why does
air quality affect transportation?
Construction of wider roads reduces congestion temporarily. Once
congestion is reduced with additional lanes, the roadway becomes more
attractive to motorists until saturation is again reached. The addition
of a project can also increase congestion on connecting roads. While congestion
does contribute to pollution problems, it also serves as a means to deter
added vehicle miles traveled. Thus, there is a need for transportation
professionals to explore alternative forms of transportation.
Glossary
Emission Budget for
motor vehicles: The
total of all motor vehicle emissions identified in the State Implementation
Plan (SIP) that an area can produce and still achieve the SIP’s
purpose which is to demonstrate attainment of the air quality standard
or in some cases, demonstrate maintenance of the standards.
Emissions Sources:
Emissions are generally classified in one of three categories: stationary
sources, area sources, and mobile sources.
- Stationary sources
are relatively large, fixed sources of emissions such as power plants,
chemical process industries, and petroleum refineries.
- Area sources are
small, stationary and nontransportation sources that collectively contribute
to air pollution (e.g., dry cleaners, bakeries, etc.)
- Mobile sources
include on-road sources such as cars, trucks, and buses, and off-road
sources such as trains, ships, boats, airplanes, lawnmowers, and construction
equipment.
National Ambient Air
Quality Standards (NAAQS): Federal Standards that set allowable concentrations
and exposure limits for various pollutants. The EPA developed the standards
in response to a requirement of the Clean Air Act.
Parking Pricing: Governments
may implement many pricing approaches. They may:
- Impose or increase
fees and surcharges for solo drivers or long term parkers in public
parking facilities.
- Give price preference
to car and vanpoolers.
- Tax the providers
of parking, whether commercial operators of parking or all public and
private entities providing parking .
- Impose parking
pricing through regional regulations, for example air quality regulations
or special legislation.
- Tie funding (especially
state government) allocations for road improvements to requirements
for local trip reduction plans incorporating parking pricing among other
demand management strategies.
State Implementation
Plan (SIP): State air quality plans required by the Clean Air Act for
nonattainment and maintenance areas. The plans are prepared by state air
quality agencies and include estimates of future air quality and control
strategies to attain appropriate air quality standards.
Transportation Control
Measures (TCM): Actions to adjust traffic patterns or reduce vehicle use
to reduce air pollutant emissions. These may include HOV lanes, provision
of bicycle facilities and sidewalks, ridesharing, telecommuting, etc.
Such actions may be included in a SIP if needed to demonstrate attainment
of the NAAQS.
Vehicle Miles Traveled
(VMT): The sum of distances traveled by all motor vehicles in a specified
region.
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