4.7 Article

Quantifying transportation energy vulnerability and its spatial patterns in the United States

Journal

SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY
Volume 82, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scs.2022.103805

Keywords

Transportation energy; Vulnerability; Fuel costs; Electric vehicles

Funding

  1. Center for Social & Behavioral Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  2. Illinois Department of Transportation
  3. Illinois Data Bank

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Transportation plays a crucial role in economic development, individual empowerment, and community value. However, high transportation and fuel costs in the United States contribute to transportation energy vulnerability. By using a data-driven framework, this study quantifies transportation energy vulnerability and presents spatial patterns across different census tracts, providing valuable insights for addressing this issue.
Transportation provides access to economic opportunities, empowers individuals and adds value to their communities. However, the average household in the United States spends 17 % of their income on transportation expenditures and almost 4 % on fuel costs. In response to both budgetary and social implications of facing burdens to meet transportation energy needs, we propose a new data-driven framework to quantify transportation energy vulnerability. We measure exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity to transportation energy burdens and present spatial patterns of transportation energy vulnerability across the United States census tracts. We examine the sensitivity of the vulnerability outcomes to the composite score's functional form and evaluate the impact of electric vehicle adoption on transportation fuel and electricity consumption. Generating the composite vulnerability score as an additive index is robust when estimating the impact of adaptive capacity interventions, but the multiplicative index performs better when exposure and sensitivity metrics are priorities. The market growth of electric vehicles reduces spatial disparities in energy vulnerability but has diminishing returns over time. We present the geography of vulnerability in Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York and find that populations in urban areas in Chicago and New York experience less transportation energy vulnerability. On the other hand, city center and rural regions' populations face a greater transportation energy burden in Los Angeles.

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