United States-European Commission Urban Freight Twinning Initiative: Compendium of Project Summaries
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Policy | United States |
The increased recognition of the environmental and human impacts of supply chain activities, such as air emissions, energy consumption, noise, and congestion, has led to public pressure for action. This includes calls for public policy actions to encourage shifting freight shipping to more sustainable modes (e.g., highway to rail).
Freight mode choice is one of the most complex decision processes in transportation, due to a multiplicity of factors. Three economic agents influence freight mode choice: shippers, carriers, and receivers. An effective implementation of a desired modal shift requires a thorough understanding of how these agents respond to various transportation policies. The objective of this research is to develop a handbook for public practitioners that describes the factors shippers and carriers consider when choosing freight modes. It also provides an analytical methodology for public practitioners to quantify the probability and outcomes of policy-induced modal shifts.
The major tasks involved in this research effort include:
This project is funded by the National Cooperative Freight Research Program (NCFRP) of the Transportation Research Board (TRB), and is being conducted by the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI), partnered with Jack Faucett and Associates.
Research
October 2013 - June 2017
Any geographic scale (national, State, or regional)
http://apps.trb.org/cmsfeed/TRBNetProjectDisplay.asp?ProjectID=3534
José Holguín-Veras, Ph.D., P.E.,F.ASCE
William H. Hart Professor
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
(518) 276-6221
JHV@rpi.edu
The project will result in a handbook that explains the factors shippers and carriers consider when choosing freight mode, and that provides a modeling framework that practitioners can use to quantify the probability and outcomes of policy-induced modal shifts.
There are many stakeholders from public and private industry involved in this study:
United States Department of Transportation - Federal Highway Administration |