Accelerating Vehicle Fleet Turnover to Achieve Sustainable Mobility Goals: Model and Data
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Sergey Naumov, Pennsylvania State University; David R. Keith, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; John D. Sterman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Version: View help for Version V4
Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
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Vensim-Model-and-Data | 02/07/2022 03:31:PM | ||
Cash For Clunkers Model Documentation.pdf | application/pdf | 255 KB | 02/07/2022 10:29:AM |
Project Citation:
Naumov, Sergey, Keith, David R., and Sterman, John D. Accelerating Vehicle Fleet Turnover to Achieve Sustainable Mobility Goals: Model and Data. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2022-02-21. https://doi.org/10.3886/E161761V4
Project Description
Summary:
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Achieving societal climate goals requires rapid reductions in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from transportation. Recent efforts by policymakers have focused on increasing consumeradoption of electric vehicles (EVs). Nevertheless, EV sales remain low. Worse, even if EV market share jumped dramatically, it would take decades to replace the existing vehicle fleet, during which time vehicle GHG emissions would continue, worsening climate change.Consequently, some argue for policies to accelerate the retirement of inefficient fossil-powered vehicles through ‘cash-for-clunkers’ (C4C) programs. We examine C4C policies through a behavioral model of vehicle fleet turnover and EV market development in the U.S. We find C4C policies can substantially reduce vehicle fleet emissions at reasonable cost per tonne of CO2. To meet emissions reductions goals, C4C policies should apply only when consumers replace their fossil-powered vehicles with EVs. C4C policies incentivizing EVs accelerate cost reductions through scale economies, charging infrastructure deployment, model variety, and consumer awareness, boosting EV adoption beyond the direct effect of vehicle replacement. The result is a substantial synergy amplifying the impact of C4C and lowering unit cost of emissions reductions. Cash-for-clunkers is further amplified when deployed together with complementary policies promoting renewable electricity production and a gas tax or carbon price.
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