A scientific article by Anatoli Unitsky on the impact of uST transport on the ecology of Orenburg has been published

The World Engineer, together with his team of co-authors, has analyzed the environmental situation in a major city in the Urals and described how uST transport can help to improve it.

Every day, Orenburg, like many other modern cities, faces a serious problem related to the harmful effects of land transport on the environment. This includes carbon dioxide emissions, toxic pollution of soil and water resources, noise pollution, and the expansion of road infrastructure.

The previously proposed solutions, such as changing the transport strategy and introducing intelligent systems, can only reduce the rate of pollution in a populated area, but they cannot completely solve the problem. 

Anatoli Unitsky sees the use of alternative technologies like uST transport as a solution. He proposes to implement the pilot project on the shortest and busiest section of the city's highway connecting the central and eastern districts.

The construction of a new overground transport infrastructure in Orenburg aims to minimize the negative impact on the environment and preserve the fertile soil, landscape, and biodiversity of the area. The environmentally friendly uST transport system runs on electricity and does not produce harmful substances during operation, such as benzpyrene, phenol, and other carcinogens. The energy-efficient operation of uST string rail systems is a result of the uPod movement on steel rails, the lack of a continuous roadway, and the absence of a parasitic airfoil effect. The complexes are resistant to most weather conditions, so at low temperatures, de-icing chemicals, which adversely affect the environment, are not needed.

The implementation of uST transport could help resolve the pressing issue of smog in Orenburg and save numerous trees which generate oxygen. Anatoli Unitsky believes that the construction of string overpasses will contribute to the future of our planet Earth and its preservation. This is a way to maintain the harmonious equilibrium that has been established over the course of millions of years of the biosphere's evolutionary process.