DocumentCode
2531613
Title
Assessing the fuel consumption and GHG of future in-use vehicles
Author
Heywood, John B.
Author_Institution
Sloan Automotive Lab., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
fYear
2010
fDate
2-4 June 2010
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
14
Abstract
Over the next several decades, substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions from transportation will be required. The targets-an 80% reduction by 2050-are challenging. Thus, we need quantitative methodologies for assessing the impact of changes in vehicle technology and use, and of fuels, on transportation energy consumption and GHG emissions. This paper describes an appropriate methodology for creating plausible future transportation scenarios and assessing their impacts. It focuses on light-duty vehicles (cars and light trucks), in the U.S. and European context. The factors that must be included are: more efficient propulsion systems; vehicle weight changes; performance, size and other vehicle attributes; and now rapidly the deployment of these improved technologies can grow over time. The methodology combines engineering assessments of vehicle performance for the different propulsion and vehicle technologies, a model of the in-use vehicle fleet, and the availability of the various possible fuels. The findings show there is significant potential for reducing petroleum consumption and GHG emissions through improvements in engines, transmissions, vehicle weight reduction, and alternative fuels.
Keywords
air pollution control; automotive engineering; diesel engines; petroleum; GHG emission reduction; alternative fuels; cars; engines; greenhouse gas emissions; light trucks; light-duty vehicles; petroleum consumption reduction; transportation energy consumption; vehicle attributes; vehicle technologies; vehicle technology; vehicle transmissions; vehicle weight; Batteries; Fuels; Marketing and sales; Polymers; Steel; Vehicles; Alternative fuels; GHG emissions; light-duty vehicle assessment; transportation energy; vehicle fleet modeling;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Energy and Sustainable Development: Issues and Strategies (ESD), 2010 Proceedings of the International Conference on
Conference_Location
Chiang Mai
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-8563-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ESD.2010.5598863
Filename
5598863
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