road transport and its impacts on environment and health
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ROAD TRANSPORT AND ITS IMPACTS ON ENVIRONMENT AND HEALTH. Dr. Mohammed Raza Mehdi. NED UNIVERSITY OF ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY, KARACHI . INTRODUCTION. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
ROAD TRANSPORT AND ITS IMPACTS ON ENVIRONMENT AND HEALTH
Dr. Mohammed Raza MehdiNED UNIVERSITY OF ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY,KARACHI
INTRODUCTION• The environmental impact of transport is
because it is a major user of energy, and burns most of the world's petroleum. This
creates air pollution, including nitrous oxides and particulates, and is a significant
contributor to global warming through emission of carbon dioxide, for which
transport is the fastest-growing emission sector. By subsector, road transport is the
largest contributor to global warming.
•An increase in Road Traffic leads to adverse effects on environment.
•These effects may include Air Pollution, Noise Pollution and Habitat Fragmentation.
•Here we are going to discuss about the first two i.e. Air and Noise Pollution.
AIR POLLUTION
At large, it is globally acceptable that air pollution has serious impacts on human
health and causes various disorders. Repetitive occurrence and intensive incidence of diseases in the vicinity of
highly polluted zones particularly, ascertain the distinct association of diseases/disorders and air pollution.
• The diseases that emerged as highly associated with air pollution are mostly the disorder of
respiratory system
The respondents of survey were largely suffering from Headache, Hypertension, Eye ailments,
Chronic Influenza, Stress and Tonsillitis. While Nausea, Chronic Cough, Hearing Loss, Learning Loss and Palpitation were prevalent disorders to
a lesser extent found in the respondents.
MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY• Morbidity (meaning "sick, unhealthy") is a
diseased state, disability, or poor health due to any cause. The term may be used to refer to the existence of any form of disease, or to the degree that the health condition affects the patient.
• Mortality is a ratio of the number of deaths (in general, or due to a specific cause) in a population, scaled to the size of that population, per unit of time.
Table 2: Indoor Morbidity and Mortality Statistics 2001 in Karachi
Data Source: Medical Record and Statistical Office, Civil Hospital, Karachi
KDA
The analysis zones determined by the then Karachi Development Authority served as the precinct of metropolitan Karachi. Figure 2 maps the disease occurrence for Karachi. The higher occurrence of
air pollution based diseases in the study area was in the district Karachi Central, specifically, North
Karachi (Zone # 31), F. C. Area and Mansoora / F B Area (Zone #28). The affected zones of district
Karachi East were Garden, Soldier Bazaar, Jamshed Quarters (Zone #11), Korangi (Zone#39), Landhi Colony (Zone#40) and Akhtar and Baloch Colony,
Chanesar Goth (Zone #25). In district Karachi South, which comprises of mostly the old city (core) localities of Karachi, Saddar and Artillery maidan (Zone # 3) had the highest occurrence of airborne diseases. Orangi, Metroville-I (Zone#30) of district Karachi West posses a significant disease problem.
Table 2 : Indoor Morbidity and Mortality Statistics of Airborne Diseases 2000 and 2001 in Karachi
Data Source: Statistical Department, Jinnah Post Graduate Medical Centre, Karachi.
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE• Air pollution contributes to mortality and
morbidity.• Thousands of patients are daily catered at
the Out Patient and Emergency departments. • More than two thousands Indoor patients
have been found affected by air-induced disorders in last two years.
POPULATION DENSITY IN KARACHI
ROAD DENSITY IN KARACHI
TRAFFIC POLLUTION RISK
NOISE POLLUTION
Noise is continuous nuisance in the urban areas of both developed and developing countries and seriously
affects the environmental quality of exposed people. Karachi as one of the growing cities of the world, producing high noise levels, which are seriously
damaging the environmental quality.
We selected 308 sites at major junctions to measure levels of noise exposure and to monitor the volumes of traffic. Karachi city experienced
severe traffic congestions around those intersections. Field survey was conducted during morning, afternoon and evening for two weeks.
Each intersection was geocoded in ArcGIS 9.3 The survey period represented normal traffic volume excluding holiday seasons such as Ramadan, Eid, etc. The levels of road traffic noise were collected
with Noise Dosimeter (Micro-14, Quest Technologies, U.S.A.). We created noise surface
maps of each time period from the field measurements to provide a view of noise exposure levels for non-measured areas within Karachi City.
FIELD MEASUREMENT(308)
Noise levels at different days and times (a) weekday morning, (b) weekday afternoon, (c) weekday evening, (d)
weekend morning, (e) weekend afternoon and (f) weekend evening.
NOISE RISK AREAS IN KARACHI
On the resultant risk map, there are 4 significant regions of very high-risk in red colour identified
as A, B C and D. These include core /old city areas of the Karachi (i.e. Saddar / Empress market) and sections adjacent to the 4 chief
arterials of Karachi.( M. A. Jinnah , Shr-e Faisal, Liaqatabad and University Roads) . The deduced very high risk region (VHRR) is characterized by bus terminals/transfer station, dense network of
roads, crowded retail markets, thousands of commuters, a lot of pedestrians, long queued
vehicles, mixed land use and high-rise buildings all around. The commercial activity of these parts of the city involves unavoidable trips,
therefore, the real human population at risk is difficult to quantify. Moreover, there is no recent,
authentic pedestrian data available and this study possesses the census figures of the
population counted as ‘resident’.
• The incidence of noise-borne diseases is very high in high risk areas (HRR). It is recommended that city planners and decision-makers could use geospatial technology to control traffic and land use in such a manner that could limit the noise
levels within WHO defined bearable thresholds.
HABITAT FRAGMENTATIONRoads can act as barriers or filters to animal movement and lead to habitat fragmentation. Many species will not cross the open space
created by a road due to the threat of predation and roads also cause increased animal mortality from traffic. This barrier
effect can prevent species from migrating and recolonising areas where the species has gone locally extinct as well as restricting access to
seasonally available or widely scattered resources.
CONCLUSION• The linkages between Transport, Environment
and Health are well established.• In land transportation, Rail mode is more
environment friendly than Road vehicular traffic.