PublicadoEl 23/11/22 por Comillas
Artículo

Effectiveness of carbon pricing policies for promoting urban freight electrification: analysis of last mile delivery in Madrid

tipo de documento semantico ckh_publication

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Doc.docx
Tamaño 12215
Formato Unknown
Fecha de publicación 05/06/2019
Fuente Revista: Central European Journal of Operations Research, Periodo: 4, Volumen: -, Número: -, Página inicial: 1, Página final: 24
Estado info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Resumen

Idioma es-ES
Resumen

This research analyzes the effect of carbon pricing policies in transport electrification. It combines a heuristic algorithm to solve the Green Vehicle Routing Problem with Multiple Technologies and Partial Recharges with an economic Total Cost of Ownership model. The paper compares the performance of battery electric (BEV) and internal combustion vehicles (ICEV) for last mile delivery, using real data of Madrid (Spain). The results show that carbon pricing is scarcely effective when daily mileage is low (precisely when BEVs require incentives), and its effectivity increases as mileage increases (precisely when it is not so necessary to incentivize BEVs). Hence, carbon pricing is not an effective tool for promoting electric vehicles in the short term, and as a result, any political decision to fix CO2 prices must be adopted with a long-term view in mind. Specifically for the case of Spain, this research shows that current aids to BEVs are insufficient, with the exception of some regions like Madrid, which complement national subsidies with regional ones.

Idioma en-GB
Resumen

This research analyzes the effect of carbon pricing policies in transport electrification. It combines a heuristic algorithm to solve the Green Vehicle Routing Problem with Multiple Technologies and Partial Recharges with an economic Total Cost of Ownership model. The paper compares the performance of battery electric (BEV) and internal combustion vehicles (ICEV) for last mile delivery, using real data of Madrid (Spain). The results show that carbon pricing is scarcely effective when daily mileage is low (precisely when BEVs require incentives), and its effectivity increases as mileage increases (precisely when it is not so necessary to incentivize BEVs). Hence, carbon pricing is not an effective tool for promoting electric vehicles in the short term, and as a result, any political decision to fix CO2 prices must be adopted with a long-term view in mind. Specifically for the case of Spain, this research shows that current aids to BEVs are insufficient, with the exception of some regions like Madrid, which complement national subsidies with regional ones.

Grupos de investigación y líneas temáticas Innovación docente y Analytics (GIIDA)

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Tipo de archivo application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
Idioma es-ES
Tipo de acceso info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Licencia http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/
Fecha de modificacion 30/03/2022
Fecha de disponibilidad 06/06/2019
fecha de alta 06/06/2019

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