European Transport Research Review (Aug 2019)

Modelling the impacts of EU countries’ electric car deployment plans on atmospheric emissions and concentrations

  • Jonatan J. Gómez Vilchez,
  • Andreea Julea,
  • Emanuela Peduzzi,
  • Enrico Pisoni,
  • Jette Krause,
  • Pelopidas Siskos,
  • Christian Thiel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12544-019-0377-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract The purpose of this work is to quantify key environmental impacts of electric vehicles deployment in the European Union. This is achieved by soft-linking three models (PRIMES-TREMOVE, DIONE and SHERPA) to explore a base and an alternative scenario. The alternative scenario draws on the assessment of the national policy frameworks for alternative fuels infrastructure requested by the Directive (2014/94/EU). Five environmental indicators are examined: tailpipe CO2, NOx and PM2.5 emissions as well as NO2 and PM2.5 urban background concentrations. By 2030, car travel activity is simulated to generate ca. 425 MtCO2/year in the EU28 under the alternative scenario. Compared to the base scenario, electric vehicles contribute to a 3% reduction in tailpipe CO2 emissions. Only two countries attain CO2 emission reductions greater than 10% in the model. The need for a higher level of policy ambition towards the deployment of less polluting vehicles in Europe is highlighted as a conclusion.

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