Alternative electrification pathways for light-duty vehicles in the European transport sector

20.500.12592/61qkg6

Alternative electrification pathways for light-duty vehicles in the European transport sector

11 Nov 2021

There is a wide consensus that a fundamental technology shift within the light duty vehicles (LDVs) sector is necessary to achieve the emissions reductions required for the Paris Agreement’s targets, but substantial controversy prevails about the most suitable strategy. While some decision makers favor a transition to battery electric vehicles, others advocate for fuel cell vehicles and e-fuels. These strategies differ markedly in terms of consumer acceptance and implications for the energy system. We explore a range of electrification pathways in Europe until 2050. Direct electrification leads to a strong reduction in direct CO2 emissions of LDVs, with electric vehicles reaching 90% of sales in 2050. Indirect electrification places substantially higher pressure on the supply sector, with almost double the primary energy demand relative to direct electricity use. In addition, the implementation of complementary policies addressing perceived inconvenience markups for alternative mobility is crucial to initiate the mobility transformation.
energy rd3 - transformation pathways

Authors

Rottoli, Marianna, Dirnaichner, Alois, Pietzcker, Robert C., Schreyer, Felix, Luderer, Gunnar

Citation
Rottoli, M., Dirnaichner, A., Pietzcker, R. C., Schreyer, F., Luderer, G. (2021): Alternative electrification pathways for light-duty vehicles in the European transport sector. - Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment, 99, 103005.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trd.2021.103005
Published in
Germany

Related Topics

All