130 research outputs found
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Do technical improvements lead to real efficiency gains? Disaggregating changes in transport energy intensity
Fuel economy standards are a key measure to increase the rate of efficiency improvements in passenger cars. The fuel consumption of vehicles can be improved in three ways: incremental technical efficiency improvements within powertrain technologies, market shifts to more efficient types of powertrains and by limiting increases in the size and performance of vehicles. This study quantifies the effect of each of these three drivers on the fuel consumption of British vehicles between 2001 and 2018 using driver-reported data on real-world fuel consumption. Analysis shows the introduction of EU fuel economy standards in 2008/09 had little effect on the rate of real technical efficiency improvements in British vehicles. Instead of adopting technical improvements at a higher rate or limiting the size and power of vehicles, these results suggest vehicle manufacturers met emissions standards by increasing the divergence between laboratory tests and real-world fuel consumption. This study adds to the growing literature calling for official test procedures to be representative of real-world driving
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Modelling transport emissions in an uncertain future: What actions make a difference?
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd A range of technology and policy actions can be put in place to reduce carbon emissions from passenger cars, this paper aims to prioritise between them, based on their likely impact and uncertainty. Formal sensitivity analysis techniques are used for the first time to determine the relative importance of factors affecting future emissions from passenger vehicles in Great Britain. The two most important actions to limit future life-cycle CO2 emissions involve shifting to electric vehicles and limiting trends towards larger and more powerful vehicles. According to our analysis over 80% of the uncertainty in future cumulative CO2 emissions can be attributed to uncertainty in electric vehicle uptake and vehicle size and power. These variables are a priority for transport policy makers. The analysis also highlights variables of comparatively low importance; these include the share of hybrid electric vehicles, the Rebound Effect and the utilisation factor of PHEVs
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Do vehicle efficiency improvements lead to energy savings? The rebound effect in Great Britain
Fuel efficiency improvements in vehicles reduce the cost of travel, which could stimulate drivers to travel further limiting energy savings. Estimates of this effect, known as the rebound effect, have varied widely, partly due to data constraints and a reliance upon highly aggregated government statistics. This paper instead uses a dataset of over 275 million vehicle roadworthiness tests. The high level of detail in our dataset can reveal, for the first time, how the response to changes in travel costs may differ across types of vehicles and socio-economic areas in Great Britain.
We find that the rebound effect in Great Britain is just 4.6%, meaning efficiency improvements are unlikely to stimulate increased mileage in the short-run. We find that larger, less fuel efficient vehicles are more responsive to fuel price changes than smaller vehicles and that drivers in urban areas are more responsive to fuel price changes than drivers in rural areas. Our findings shed light on the effects that policies such as fuel taxation and fuel economy standards may have on vehicle mileage. This has implications for both CO2 emissions savings and social equity
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The quality rebound effect in transportation
© 2019 European Council for an Energy Efficient Economy. All rights reserved. Energy is needed in society to provide energy services. Reducing the energy to deliver these services is at the core of energy efficiency. Energy services have both a quantitative and qualitative value. In the case of transportation, the quantity of service can be expressed simply in passenger kilometres, whereas quality aspects are affected by several vehicle attributes such as size and performance as well as travel times and comfort. Improving energy efficiency can stimulate consumers to travel more and thus consume a greater quantity of transportation. This phenomenon is known as the 'rebound' effect and has been well studied. Less studied are rebound effects in quality of service; how reductions in travel costs, due to fuel price changes and technical efficiency improvements, can stimulate people to increase the quality of transport, for example by purchasing a larger vehicle. Consumers continue to buy larger and more powerful vehicles in many countries. These purchasing trends mean that technical improvements in vehicle fuel consumption are undermined by shifts to larger vehicle segments. New hybrid and electric powertrains entering the market promise large improvements in fuel consumption. However, if these efficiency improvements stimulate shifts to even larger vehicles through quality rebound effects, the full potential energy savings may not materialise. Understanding and quantifying these quality rebound effects is therefore of paramount importance for energy modellers and policy makers. This paper uses a unique dataset of vehicle sales in the UK between 2001 and 2017, to investigate the effects of fuel price, income and technical improvements on stimulating a shift to larger and more powerful vehicles. Econometric regression techniques are used to show increasing income and the growing share of diesel and hybrid powertrains partially explain the shift to large vehicles. This suggests vehicle taxes in larger segments have not been sufficiently high and need to be rectified
A new method to estimate the lifetime of long-life product categories
Increased recycling and reuse rates are a central part of the objectives laid out by the COP21. Nonetheless, the practical implementation of what has been called the circular economy, as well as its true potential are not easily established. This is because the impact and implementation time scales of any intervention depend on knowing the lifetime of products, which is frequently unknown. This is particularly true in construction, responsible for 39% of worldwide emissions, 11% of which are embodied.
Most MFA models will simply assume a range of plausible life expectancies when bottom-up data is lacking (e.g. for buildings). In this work, we propose a novel method of identification using the high quality but highly aggregated trade data available, and use it to establish a “mortality curve” for buildings and other long-lasting products. This identification method is intended to provide more reliable inputs to existing MFA models. It is widely applicable due to the general availability of the underlying data. Using it on UK trade data, we identify product classes at 1 year for packaging/home scrap, one around 10 years for vehicles/equipment, and around 50 years for construction. The identification approach was then validated using classical approaches using bottom up data for vehicles
Geospatial information infrastructures
Manual of Digital Earth / Editors: Huadong Guo, Michael F. Goodchild, Alessandro Annoni .- Springer, 2020 .- ISBN: 978-981-32-9915-3Geospatial information infrastructures (GIIs) provide the technological, semantic,organizationalandlegalstructurethatallowforthediscovery,sharing,and use of geospatial information (GI). In this chapter, we introduce the overall concept and surrounding notions such as geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial datainfrastructures(SDI).WeoutlinethehistoryofGIIsintermsoftheorganizational andtechnologicaldevelopmentsaswellasthecurrentstate-of-art,andreflectonsome of the central challenges and possible future trajectories. We focus on the tension betweenincreasedneedsforstandardizationandtheever-acceleratingtechnological changes. We conclude that GIIs evolved as a strong underpinning contribution to implementation of the Digital Earth vision. In the future, these infrastructures are challengedtobecomeflexibleandrobustenoughtoabsorbandembracetechnological transformationsandtheaccompanyingsocietalandorganizationalimplications.With this contribution, we present the reader a comprehensive overview of the field and a solid basis for reflections about future developments
Structural and electrical properties of nanostructured silicon carbon films
Abstract The effect of the rf power on the structural and electrical properties of nanostructured silicon carbon films deposited by Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapour Deposition system, using silane and methane gas mixture highly diluted in hydrogen, has been investigated. The structural and electrical properties are found to depend strongly on rf power. The increase of the rf power decreases the size of the silicon crystallites as well as the crystalline fraction and increases the carbon content in the films. The study not only indicates the correlation between crystalline fraction and the electrical conductivity but also reveals the presence of nanocrystallites in the films deposited at high rf power
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Global material flow analysis of glass: From raw materials to end of life
Abstract: Global glass production grew to 150 million tonnes (Mt) in 2014, equating to approximately 21 kg per person. Producing this glass is energy intensive and contributes annual CO2 emissions of some 86Mt. An accurate map of the global glass supply chain is needed to help identify emissions mitigation options from across the supply chain, including process energy efficiency and material efficiency options. This map does not yet exist, so we address this knowledge gap by tracing the production chain from raw materials to end of life and producing a global Sankey diagram of container and flat glass making for 2014. To understand future demand for flat glass we also model the stocks of glass in vehicles and buildings. The analysis shows the relative scale of glass flows and stocks worldwide and provides a baseline for future study of the emission mitigation potential of energy and material efficiency of manufacturing with glass
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