West Sussex initiatives to reduce carbon emissions highlighted in week of COP26

Recent West Sussex initiatives to encourage active travel choices and reduce carbon emissions have been highlighted as world leaders meet in Glasgow for COP26 this week.
Picture montage: from top left: the Velocity road patcher in action; the A24 Washington carriageway resurfacing scheme; bottom left, an image from our ongoing Active Travel campaign, and results from the programme of 31 footway resurfacing schemesPicture montage: from top left: the Velocity road patcher in action; the A24 Washington carriageway resurfacing scheme; bottom left, an image from our ongoing Active Travel campaign, and results from the programme of 31 footway resurfacing schemes
Picture montage: from top left: the Velocity road patcher in action; the A24 Washington carriageway resurfacing scheme; bottom left, an image from our ongoing Active Travel campaign, and results from the programme of 31 footway resurfacing schemes

These include:

West Sussex Transport Plan

County council officers continue work on the West Sussex Transport Plan, which will set out how it intends to balance environmental, economic and social objectives and resolve conflicts between them.

The draft plan proposes to improve the efficiency of the county strategic road network (e.g. A27 and parts of the A24 and A259) to reduce congestion and rat-running on less suitable routes.

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In parallel, the council wants to support the shift to electric cars and more use of buses, trains, walking and cycling by making these modes of transport safer and more attractive.

Bus Service Improvement Plan

The county council is working with bus and coach operators on a Bus Service Improvement Plan (BSIP) to try to make it more attractive for residents to leave their cars at home and choose to use buses – a modal shift towards sustainable transport.

The BSIP will also set out ambitions for working with operators to prioritise the decarbonisation of buses, so lower-emission vehicles can be used on key routes.

This would be dependent on funding from the Department for Transport. Firm proposals for better, more frequent bus services were recently submitted to the Government.

Active Travel

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The Government has just awarded £274,900 so the county council can develop its next package of cycling and walking schemes and promotional activity.

The successful bid to the Department for Transport’s enabling fund means that initial designs for three Local Cycling and Walking Infrastructure Plans (LCWIP) schemes can be developed ready for the next round of Active Travel Fund capital funding.

The LCWIPs are produced by the county council, some of our district and borough partners and the South Downs National Park Authority. The funding also means the county council can continue its work in promoting active travel, such as its ongoing Think Active Travel campaign, designed to help residents make positive choices around how they travel, wherever possible. Work to encourage pupils and parents to walk to school can resume, too - building on the ‘walk to school’ project started by Living Streets in 2012.

WSCC’s new council plan sets a target of providing at least 30km of new cycling infrastructure in West Sussex over the next four years. More than 27km of new cyclable infrastructure has been provided since 2018/19. A further eight schemes are currently at various stages of development.

Highways projects

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Highways officers continue to work with contractors to explore use of the latest technology, such as allowing resurfacing materials to be mixed at much lower temperatures than conventional asphalt and using recycled material from our roads. This can significantly cut the carbon emissions, without impacting on quality.

Joy Dennis, cabinet member for highways and transport, said: “The COP26 conference is focusing everyone’s minds on the environment and our officers continue their hard work to encourage active travel and explore lower carbon methods of road maintenance.

“They are finalising work on the West Sussex Transport Plan (WSTP) following a public consultation which saw about 650 responses and I would like to thank all those who provided us with their valued feedback.

“We need to invest to make walking, cycling, bus and train use more viable and attractive to minimise the need for road building in line with our environmental ambitions. We also need good roads both now, and in the future, to accommodate West Sussex’s rising population and wider economic growth. Our teams are exploring the challenge of how we need to balance these competing demands and innovate to ensure roads are maintained in a sustainable way.”

Recent Highways initiatives include:

Carbon reduction and road resurfacing

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In June/July, approximately 3km of both carriageways of the A24 Washington bypass was resurfaced by FM Conway utilising latest technologies to reduce the project’s carbon emissions.

The work, between the Findon and Washington roundabouts, used the latest technology, allowing the resurfacing materials to be mixed at much lower temperatures than conventional asphalt. Also, approximately half the material used in the scheme utilised recycled material recovered from other West Sussex roads.

These measures greatly reduced the amount of energy needed to produce the resurfacing materials and significantly cut the carbon emissions attributed to the scheme.

Pothole repairs and carbon reduction

Innovation continues to be explored by the County Council through the trial use of the Velocity road patching system. There’s no excavation, no waste, often no need for road closures, and repairs are ready to drive on in minutes. Because there’s no heat involved, it’s also exceptionally low on carbon emissions.

Footway resurfacing and carbon reduction

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Impressive carbon-saving and cost-saving results were achieved in a programme of 31 footway resurfacing schemes in West Sussex.

More than 22,000 square metres of footpath were resurfaced by County Council contactor Rejuvo JPCS, including in Crawley, Horsham, Mid Sussex and Chichester. If traditional asphalt methods had been used, 554 tonnes of CO2 emissions would have been produced, but by using cold-lay and other, more environmentally friendly methods, this was reduced to approximately 36 tonnes. There was also a 71 per cent cost-saving when compared with traditional methods.

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