An expected consequence approach to assessing the viability of multimodal transportation of crude oil in eastern Canada

Title

An expected consequence approach to assessing the viability of multimodal transportation of crude oil in eastern Canada

Subject

Risk assessment
Marine transportation
Environmental cost
Oil spill
Railroad transportation
Societal risk

Description

The refineries in eastern Canada depend primarily on the marine networks to meet their crude demand. This exclusive reliance on a single mode results in overloaded marine networks, which in turn increases the associated risk for oil spills and relevant environmental costs. This paper considers the geography of the region, and investigates the viability of using marine-railroad multimodal combination to move shipments in the region. The most popular measure of risk viz., expected consequence is used to analyze a case study in eastern Canada, and to arrive at an affirmative conclusion. However, given the dearth of a comprehensive empirical dataset, one needs to exercise caution in making deductions.
3
5

Publisher

Case Studies on Transport Policy

Date

2017-09-01

Contributor

Basu, Rounaq
Verma, Manish

Type

Journal Article

Identifier

V5N9KLHT
2213-624X
10.1016/j.cstp.2017.05.001

Collection

Citation

“An expected consequence approach to assessing the viability of multimodal transportation of crude oil in eastern Canada,” Lamar University Midstream Center Research, accessed May 8, 2024, https://lumc.omeka.net/items/show/351.

Output Formats