Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Transportation and greenhouse emissions #4

Open
marcelosousa opened this issue May 10, 2023 · 11 comments
Open

Transportation and greenhouse emissions #4

marcelosousa opened this issue May 10, 2023 · 11 comments

Comments

@marcelosousa
Copy link
Member

Hey @robinaidev, lets discuss the role of transportation and greenhouse emissions. I'm particularly interested in the vehicle optimisations in public transportation.

@robinaidev
Copy link

Hi @marcelosousa! Transportation is responsible for a significant amount of greenhouse gas emissions, and optimizing public transportation systems to reduce emissions is definitely an important area to explore. What specific aspects are you particularly interested in?

@marcelosousa
Copy link
Member Author

Give me some data to understand the impact of transportation in greenhouse gas emissions.

@robinaidev
Copy link

Sure, according to the EPA, transportation accounts for about 28% of total greenhouse gas emissions in the United States. Within transportation, cars and light-duty trucks are responsible for the largest share of emissions, followed by aircraft, ships, and trains. Public transportation is generally more efficient and emits less carbon per passenger mile than individual car use, but there is certainly room for improvement. Do you have any ideas for optimizing public transportation systems to reduce emissions?

@marcelosousa
Copy link
Member Author

What kind of improvements are you aware of? Provide some startups that are tackling this problem.

@robinaidev
Copy link

Some potential improvements for public transportation systems include transitioning to electric or hybrid buses, implementing more efficient routing and scheduling, and incentivizing ridership with benefits like reduced fares or rewards programs. As for startups working in this space, there are many! For example, Citymapper is a transportation app that helps users navigate public transit options in their city. Remix provides software that helps cities optimize their public transit systems. And Even Cargo is a startup working on electric delivery trucks that could help reduce emissions from package deliveries. Do any of these sound interesting to you?

@marcelosousa
Copy link
Member Author

Connect this topic to optimisations in remaining useful life (RUL)

@robinaidev
Copy link

Sure, optimizing public transportation systems for reduced emissions can also be connected to improving the remaining useful life (RUL) of vehicles. By implementing regular maintenance schedules and using real-time sensor data to identify and address issues early, transportation systems can extend the lifespan of their vehicles and reduce the need for costly replacements. This, in turn, can help reduce emissions by reducing the production and disposal of vehicles.

@marcelosousa
Copy link
Member Author

Give me literature references to learn more about RUL and potential connection with replacement cost optimisation.

@robinaidev
Copy link

Sure, some literature references on RUL and replacement cost optimization in transportation systems include "A survey of remaining useful life estimation techniques in the context of prognostics and health management" by Saxena et al., "Optimizing Replacement of Highway Bridges Considering Life Cycle Cost and Remaining Useful Life" by Zhou et al., and "Optimal Preventive Maintenance Policy with Minimal Repair Actions for a System with Residual Value and Stochastic Failure" by Li et al. These papers provide insights into RUL estimation techniques and how they can be incorporated into cost optimization models for transportation systems.

@marcelosousa
Copy link
Member Author

Can you provide a summary of "Optimizing Replacement of Highway Bridges Considering Life Cycle Cost and Remaining Useful Life" by Zhou et al.?

@robinaidev
Copy link

Sure, "Optimizing Replacement of Highway Bridges Considering Life Cycle Cost and Remaining Useful Life" by Zhou et al. discusses a model for optimizing the replacement schedule of aging highway bridges based on consideration of costs and remaining useful life. The authors propose a mixed integer programming model that minimizes total lifecycle costs, taking into account factors such as maintenance costs, rehabilitation costs, and remaining useful life estimates. The model is intended to help transportation agencies make more informed decisions about bridge replacement and maintenance, ultimately leading to more efficient and cost-effective systems.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

2 participants