Abstract

Frequent road intersections in Dhaka–Chittagong National Highway (NH1), the major transport corridor of Bangladesh, significantly reduce the level of service of the corridor and eventually leads to inefficient fuel economy and excessive greenhouse gas (GHG) emission. In spite of upgrading NH1 into a four-lane highway, major road intersections reduce vehicle speed and increase congestion time and eventually burn fuel. Fuel expenses during this lost time cover no distance but increase vehicular emission within the vicinity of road and contribute to roadside temperature. Besides, the transport sector’s energy demand in Bangladesh is supported mostly by imported fuel that drains out foreign currency and inhibits GDP growth. Against the backdrop, the Government of Bangladesh is proposing to construct a four-lane expressway. The paper attempts to estimate the fuel loss savings, GHG emission reduction and economic benefit of constructing Dhaka–Chittagong Expressway. As the construction of the expressway paved a way for an increment of traffic growth by 10%, the study infers that the average lost time because of 36 intersections for a projected annual average daily traffic of 27,334 vehicles/day (in 2022). In addition to that, the fuel loss savings for various vehicle classes affect economic growth and the ensuing idling emission of EFI and MFI engines contributes to transport sector pollution. The study intends to expedite the fact that Dhaka–Chittagong Expressway would not only replace road interventions that reduce travel time cost, expenditures regarding vehicle operating and accident but also contributes cardinally to economic emancipation of the country. The estimated Benefit–Cost Ratio (BCR) was 1.23, net present value was 762.34 Million USD) and Economic Internal Rate of return was 18.27% of the proposed project.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Background of the researchMotorization–development–urbanization is a steadily increasing phenomenon that is observed in many developing countries like Bangladesh

  • The traffic data and fuel efficiency information used in this study are extracted from secondary source like published journals (e.g., International Journal of Environmental Science and Technology, Journal of Atmospheric Environment, Journal of Air Waste Manage Association), national (e.g., Ministry of Communications, Ministry of Road Transport and Bridges, Bangladesh Economic Zones Authority, Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation) and international websites (e.g., Japan International Cooperation Agency, Asian Development Bank, World Bank, Transportation Research Board, International Energy Agency) (References)

  • Since the feasibility study had a wide range of scope of work, it explored rigorously potential impacts associated with the new construction project

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Summary

Introduction

1.1 Background of the researchMotorization–development–urbanization is a steadily increasing phenomenon that is observed in many developing countries like Bangladesh. Since there are growing changes in transport sector aiming at enhancing connectivity across countries, the dependence on energy sources based on fossil fuel has increased rapidly in recent years and as a result greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have increased. On this backdrop, the Government of Bangladesh is pursuing an environment-friendly sustainable transport system to implement National Integrated Multimodal Transport Policy, 2013, which clearly spells out, “Future planning or transport sector must, ensure that the system is sustainable and environment friendly in the long run”. In spite of four lanes, the 230.0-km journey between the capital city Dhaka and the port city Chittagong would take on average 7.0 h because of congestion on the road, resulting from frequent interventions against the traffic flow

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