• DocumentCode
    1270590
  • Title

    Greenhouse Gas Emission Impacts of Carsharing in North America

  • Author

    Martin, Elliot W. ; Shaheen, Susan A.

  • Author_Institution
    Transp. Sustainability Res. Center, Univ. of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley), Richmond, CA, USA
  • Volume
    12
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2011
  • Firstpage
    1074
  • Lastpage
    1086
  • Abstract
    This paper evaluates the greenhouse gas (GHG) emission impacts that result from individuals participating in carsharing organizations within North America. The authors con ducted an online survey with members of major carsharing organizations and evaluated the change in annual household emissions (e.g., impact) of respondents that joined carsharing. The results show that a majority of households joining carsharing are increasing their emissions by gaining access to automobiles. However, individually, these increases are small. In contrast, the remaining households are decreasing their emissions by shedding vehicles and driving less. The collective emission reductions outweigh the collective emission increases, which implies that carsharing reduces GHG emissions as a whole. The results are reported in the form of an observed impact, which strictly evaluates the changes in emissions that physically occur, and a full impact, which also considers emissions that would have happened but were avoided due to carsharing. The mean observed impact is -0.58 t GHG/year per household, whereas the mean full impact is -0.84 t GHG/year per household. Both means are statistically significant. We present a sensitivity analysis to evaluate the robustness of the results and find that the overall results hold across a variety of assumptions. The average observed vehicle kilometers traveled (VKT) per year was found to decline by 27%. We conclude with an evaluation of the annual aggregate impacts of carsharing based on current knowledge of the industry membership population.
  • Keywords
    air pollution control; automobiles; statistical analysis; GHG; North America; automobiles; carsharing; greenhouse gas emission impacts; sensitivity analysis; vehicle kilometers traveled; Greenhouse effect; North America; Sensitivity analysis; Vehicles; Carsharing; greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions; statistical analysis; survey design;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Intelligent Transportation Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1524-9050
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TITS.2011.2158539
  • Filename
    5951778