2011
DOI: 10.3141/2252-14
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Evolution of the Light-Duty Vehicle Fleet

Abstract: With environmental degradation and energy security as serious concerns, it is important to anticipate how vehicle ownership and usage patterns can change under different policies and contexts. This work ascertains the acquisition, disposal, and use patterns of personal vehicles of a synthetic population over time and relies on microsimulation to anticipate fleet composition, usage, and greenhouse gas emissions under different settings. Twenty-five-year simulations predict the highest market share for plug-in h… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In relation to vehicle size and type, Choo & Mokhtarian (2004) considered luxury cars, sport vehicles and minivans, while Adler et al (2003); Axsen et al (2009) and Paul et al (2011) established an ample range of alternative sizes and typologies. McCarthy & Tay (1998) also considered the brand, length of the vehicle and presence of airbags as further explanatory variables.…”
Section: Technical Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In relation to vehicle size and type, Choo & Mokhtarian (2004) considered luxury cars, sport vehicles and minivans, while Adler et al (2003); Axsen et al (2009) and Paul et al (2011) established an ample range of alternative sizes and typologies. McCarthy & Tay (1998) also considered the brand, length of the vehicle and presence of airbags as further explanatory variables.…”
Section: Technical Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Methods proposed to treat heterogeneity are diverse. One of the most widely applied is the introduction of factors that describe the choice context and may have an influence on the final decision (Brownstone et al, 1996;McCarthy and Tay, 1998;Musti and Kockelman, 2011;Paul et al, 2011). These can be socioeconomic variables, personality and lifestyle characteristics or mobility aspects (Choo and Mokhtarian, 2004), travel patterns (Ewing and Sarigöllü, 1998) and economic and cultural circumstances, as highlighted by Tanaka et al (2014) in the comparison of several US states with Japan.…”
Section: Literature Summary and Research Proposalmentioning
confidence: 99%