conference paper

An analysis of health impacts from PM and NOx emissions resulting from train operations in the alameda corridor, California

Proceedings of the 89th annual meeting of the transportation research board

Abstract

The goal of this paper is to estimate the health impacts resulting from exposure to PM and NOx emitted by train operations in the Alameda corridor, a crucial rail link that serves the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, also known as the San Pedro Bay Ports (SPBP). The authors link a pollutant dispersion model (CalPUFF) to a health benefits assessment model (BenMAP) to discover population-based health impacts of PM and NOx emissions from train operations (switching and line haul). After analyzing year 2005 as our baseline, we consider two scenarios that correspond to switching to Tier 2 and Tier 3 locomotives. The authors find that mortality from PM exposure accounts for the largest health impacts, with health costs in excess of $40 million annually. A shift to Tier 2 locomotives would save approximately half of the annual health costs but the benefits of shifting from Tier 2 to Tier 3 locomotives would be much smaller. This assessment is only partial, however, because of gaps in available health data. To our knowledge, this is the first application of BenMAP to conduct a health assessment at the county level.

Suggested Citation
Mana Sangkapichai, Jean-Daniel Saphores, Oladele Ogunseitan, Stephen G. Ritchie and Gunwoo Lee (2010) “An analysis of health impacts from PM and NOx emissions resulting from train operations in the alameda corridor, California”, in Proceedings of the 89th annual meeting of the transportation research board, p. 19p.