Global
warming to affect transport By
RANDOLPH E. SCHMID AP SCIENCE WRITER WASHINGTON
-- Flooded roads and subways, deformed railroad tracks and weakened bridges may
be the wave of the future with continuing global warming, a new study says. Climate
change will affect every type of transportation through rising sea levels, increased
rainfall and surges from more intense storms, the National Research Council said
in a report released Tuesday. Complicating
matters, people continue to move into coastal areas, creating the need for more
roads and services in the most vulnerable regions, the report noted. "The
time has come for transportation professionals to acknowledge and confront the
challenges posed by climate change and to incorporate the most current scientific
knowledge into the planning of transportation systems," said Henry Schwartz
Jr., past president and chairman of the engineering firm Sverdrup/Jacobs Civil
Inc., and chairman of the committee that wrote the report. The
report cites five major areas of growing threat: -
More heat waves, requiring load limits at hot-weather or high-altitude airports
and causing thermal expansion of bridge joints and rail track deformities. -
Rising sea levels and storm surges flooding coastal roadways, forcing evacuations,
inundating airports and rail lines, flooding tunnels and eroding bridge bases. -
More rainstorms, delaying air and ground traffic, flooding tunnels and railways,
and eroding road, bridge and pipeline supports. -
More frequent strong hurricanes, disrupting air and shipping service, blowing
debris onto roads and damaging buildings. -
Rising arctic temperatures thawing permafrost, resulting in road, railway and
airport runway subsidence and potential pipeline failures. The
nation's transportation system was built for local conditions based on historical
weather data, but those data may no longer be reliable in the face of new weather
extremes, the report warns. The
committee said proper preparation will be expensive and called on federal, state
and local governments to increase consideration of climate change in transportation
planning and construction. The
report notes, for example, that drier conditions are likely in the watersheds
supplying the St. Lawrence Seaway and the Great Lakes. The resulting lower water
levels would reduce vessel shipping capacity, seriously impairing freight movements
in the region, such as occurred during the drought of 1988. Meanwhile,
California heat waves are likely to increase wildfires that can destroy transportation
infrastructure. The
outlook isn't all bad, however. The
report says marine transportation could benefit from more open seas in the Arctic,
creating new and shorter shipping routes and reducing transport time and costs. The
report was prepared by the Transportation Research Board and the Division on Earth
and Life Studies of the National Research Council. The groups are part of the
National Academy of Sciences, an independent agency chartered by Congress to advise
the government on scientific matters. Sponsors
of the study were the Transportation Research Board, the National Cooperative
Highway Research Program, the Transportation Department, the Transit Cooperative
Research Program, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers. |