Heavy-duty construction equipment: dinosaurs of black energy?
Paper in proceeding, 2021

Construction equipment emissions in civil engineering are a major sustainability issue. However, the industry continues investing in diesel (and/or biodiesel) machines - which, even if compliant with EU regulations, are far from “clean”. Cleaner technologies in construction equipment, like electrical engines, are considered more expensive investments; moreover, they are dependent on the available power supply while operating in confined areas. So, transitioning these machines sustainably involves changing technologies, business models, and public regulation. In Scandinavia, heavy-duty engines (over 25 tons) have only recently become (limitedly) available. Therefore, the current paper analyzes enablers and barriers for a sustainable transition of civil engineering construction equipment to onsite electrical machines in Scandinavia. The sustainable transition theory, combined with sustainable business models, serves as the framework of understanding. Empirically, a desk study of governance and regulation is combined with material from four fossil-free test building sites in Norway, Denmark, and Sweden. The results highlight the importance of a public-private business model, where public client-driven transition is subsidy-supported (e.g., making electrical equipment available through concession, and encouraging small innovative machine manufacturers to develop electrical equipment), while waiting for international construction equipment players to become transition-ready. Recommendations for the transition thus include strengthening public-private collaboration.

heavy-duty

Scandinavia

sustainable transition

electrical engines

Author

Christian Koch

Halmstad University

Dimosthenis Kifokeris

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Building Design

Proceedings of the 37th Annual ARCOM Conference, ARCOM 2021

694-703

37th Annual Conference of the Association of Researchers in Construction Management (ARCOM 2021)
Online, ,

Electric Worksite II

FFI - Strategic Vehicle Research and Innovation, 2021-07-01 -- 2023-09-30.

Subject Categories

Other Mechanical Engineering

Construction Management

Other Engineering and Technologies not elsewhere specified

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Latest update

4/21/2023