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Incorporating Greenhouse Gas Emissions into the Collaborative Decision-Making Process (2012)

Chapter: Capacity Technical Coordinating Committee

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Page 97
Suggested Citation:"Capacity Technical Coordinating Committee ." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2012. Incorporating Greenhouse Gas Emissions into the Collaborative Decision-Making Process. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/22805.
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Page 97

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TrB oversighT commiTTee for The sTraTegic highway research program 2* Chair: Kirk T. Steudle, Director, Michigan Department of Transportation MeMbers H. Norman Abramson, Executive Vice President (retired), Southwest Research Institute Alan C. Clark, MPO Director, Houston–Galveston Area Council Frank L. Danchetz, Vice President, ARCADIS-US, Inc. Stanley Gee, Executive Deputy Commissioner, New York State Department of Transportation Michael P. Lewis, Director, Rhode Island Department of Transportation Susan Martinovich, Director, Nevada Department of Transportation John R. Njord, Executive Director, Utah Department of Transportation Charles F. Potts, Chief Executive Officer, Heritage Construction and Materials Ananth K. Prasad, Secretary, Florida Department of Transportation Gerald M. Ross, Chief Engineer, Georgia Department of Transportation George E. Schoener, Executive Director, I-95 Corridor Coalition Kumares C. Sinha, Olson Distinguished Professor of Civil Engineering, Purdue University ex OfficiO MeMbers John C. Horsley, Executive Director, American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Victor M. Mendez, Administrator, Federal Highway Administration David L. Strickland, Administrator, National Highway Transportation Safety Administration LiaisOns Ken Jacoby, Communications and Outreach Team Director, Office of Corporate Research, Technology, and Innovation Management, Federal Highway Administration Tony Kane, Director, Engineering and Technical Services, American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Jeffrey F. Paniati, Executive Director, Federal Highway Administration John Pearson, Program Director, Council of Deputy Ministers Responsible for Transportation and Highway Safety, Canada Michael F. Trentacoste, Associate Administrator, Research, Development, and Technology, Federal Highway Administration caPaciTY TecHnicaL cOOrDinaTinG cOMMiTTee* Chair: Mark Van Port Fleet, Director, Bureau of Highway Development, Michigan Department of Transportation MeMbers Kome Ajise, Program Manager, Public-Private Partnership Program, California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) Michael Bruff, Manager, Transportation Planning Branch, North Carolina Department of Transportation Jacquelyn D. Grimshaw, Vice President for Policy, Center for Neighborhood Technology Kris Hoellen, Director, Conservation Leadership Network, The Conservation Fund Carolyn H. Ismart, Florida Department of Transportation (retired) Randy Iwasaki, Executive Director, Contra Costa Transportation Authority Thomas J. Kane, Thomas J. Kane Consulting Keith L. Killough, Assistant Director, Travel Demand Modeling and Analysis, Multimodal Planning Division, Arizona Department of Transportation T. Keith Lawton, Principal, Keith Lawton Consulting, Inc. Edward A. Mierzejewski, Director of Transportation Research, Gannett Fleming, Inc. Bob Romig, State Transportation Development Administrator, Florida Department of Transportation Joseph L. Schofer, Professor of Civil Engineering and Environmental Engineering and Associate Dean, McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, Northwestern University Barry Seymour, Executive Director, Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission Brian Smith, Washington State Department of Transportation John V. Thomas, Office of Policy, Economics, and Innovation, Environmental Protection Agency Gary Toth, Director, Project for Public Spaces Jeff Welch, Director, Knoxville Regional Transportation Planning Organization Doug Woodall, State Director, Turnpike Planning and Development, Texas Turnpike Authority Division, Texas Department of Transportation aasHTO LiaisOn Janet P. Oakley, Director, Policy and Government Relations, American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials fHWa LiaisOns Patricia Cazenas, SHRP 2 Implementation Director, Research and Financial Services, Federal Highway Administration Spencer Stevens, Community Planner, Office of Planning Oversight and Stewardship, Federal Highway Administration *Membership as of December 2012

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TRB’s second Strategic Highway Research Program (SHRP 2) Report S2-C09-RR-1: Incorporating Greenhouse Gas Emissions into the Collaborative Decision-Making Process identifies where and how greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and energy consumption fit into a conceptual decision-making framework, including key decision points.

The report presents background information on the role of GHG emissions in the transportation sector, factors influencing the future of emissions, GHG emissions reduction strategies, as well as information on cost effectiveness and feasibility of these reduction strategies. It also presents case studies to illustrate different scales and institutional contexts for GHG analyses.

A web-based technical framework, Integrating Greenhouse Gas into Transportation Planning, which was developed as part of SHRP 2 Capacity Project C09, provides information on the models, data sources, and methods that can be used to conduct GHG emissions analysis. The framework is part of the Transportation for Communities: Advancing Projects through Partnerships (TCAPP) website. TCAPP is organized around decision points in the planning, programming, environmental review, and permitting processes. TCAPP is now known as PlanWorks.

SHRP 2 Capacity Project C09 also produced a Practitioners Guide that presents information on how GHG emissions can be incorporated into transportation planning when using different types of collaborative decision-making approaches and includes an appendix with detailed technical information for GHG analyses.

An e-book version of this report is available for purchase at Amazon, Google, and iTunes.

In June 2013, SHRP 2 released a project brief on SHRP 2 Project C09.

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