{ "background": "Road infrastructure reconstruction in fragile states presents significant environmental challenges, with carbon emissions from construction activities being a critical yet understudied aspect. The post-conflict context of South Sudan, characterised by urgent reconstruction needs and limited environmental governance, necessitates a rigorous assessment of the climate impacts of different engineering methodologies. ", "purpose and objectives": "This study aims to quantify and compare the life cycle carbon emissions associated with conventional full-depth reclamation and a modified in-situ stabilisation technique for road reconstruction. The objective is to identify the methodology with the lower carbon footprint under local operational constraints. ", "methodology": "A process-based Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) was conducted, following ISO 14040/44 standards, for two functionally equivalent road sections. System boundaries included material production, transport, on-site construction, and machinery use. Emissions were modelled using a linear regression framework: Ei = \0 + \1 Mi + \2 Ti + \, where Ei is total emissions, Mi is material intensity, and Ti is transport distance. Uncertainty was propagated using Monte Carlo simulation. ", "findings": "The modified in-situ stabilisation technique yielded a mean reduction of 38% in embodied carbon per kilometre compared to conventional reclamation (95% confidence interval: 32% to 44%). This reduction was primarily driven by a 65% decrease in imported aggregate requirements, outweighing the increased emissions from stabiliser production and application. ", "conclusion": "The modified in-situ methodology offers a substantially lower-carbon pathway for road reconstruction in this specific operational context, demonstrating that material sourcing and transport are the dominant factors in the project carbon footprint. ", "recommendations": "Project planners and environmental regulators should prioritise specifications that minimise the transport of virgin materials and promote the use of locally available, stabilised in-situ materials. Further development of region-specific emission factors for construction materials is also recommended. ", "key words": "Life Cycle Assessment,
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Achol Majok
Catholic University of South Sudan
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Achol Majok (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b25b1996eeacc4fcec9753 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18933896
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