The Impact of Fracking on Freight Distribution Patterns
The increasing production of domestic energy through the use of fracking will likely alter local/regional/national economies and corresponding freight distribution patterns (highway, rail, marine, pipeline) in the United States (U.S.) The proposed project will assess the impact of fracking on freight transportation demand and corresponding distribution patterns, for the purpose of identifying where the system is or will become overly stressed (in addition to identifying where excess capacity has been created due to shifts in freight transportation patterns). This will be achieved by deploying a methodology in which multiple future scenarios are defined in terms of fracking activity and energy consumption, each scenario is analyzed according to the resulting freight distribution across modal networks using a routing tool developed under a prior National Center for Freight & Infrastructure Research and Education (CFIRE) initiative, and the results evaluated according to specific performance measures.
Language
- English
Project
- Status: Completed
- Funding: $75000.00
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Contract Numbers:
DTRT12-G-UTC19
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Sponsor Organizations:
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC United States 20590 -
Performing Organizations:
Vanderbilt University
400 24th Avenue, South
Nashville, TN United States 37235 -
Principal Investigators:
Abkowitz, Mark
- Start Date: 20140801
- Expected Completion Date: 0
- Actual Completion Date: 20161130
- Source Data: RiP Project 38287
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Energy consumption; Energy resources; Freight transportation; Impacts; Routing; Travel patterns
- Geographic Terms: United States
- Subject Areas: Energy; Freight Transportation; Planning and Forecasting;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01547319
- Record Type: Research project
- Source Agency: National Center for Freight and Infrastructure Research and Education (CFIRE)
- Contract Numbers: DTRT12-G-UTC19
- Files: UTC, RIP
- Created Date: Dec 6 2014 1:00AM