4.4 Article

The elasticity and efficiency of carbon reduction strategies in transportation

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15567036.2023.2276380

Keywords

Carbon elasticity; carbon policy; meta-analysis; policy efficiency; transport policy

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study fills the knowledge gaps in evaluating the effectiveness of transport carbon policies and offers a comprehensive comparative overview. Mobility hubs and electric vehicles are considered the most effective policies, while shared bikes and hydrogen vehicles rank lower.
Transportation significantly contributes to carbon emissions, prompting the need for effective mitigation policies. This study addresses the knowledge gaps in assessing the effectiveness of transport carbon policies and offers the lack of a holistic comparative overview. The study used a model composed of a mixed-effects meta-regression and carbon elasticity to investigate policies, like shared bikes, mobility hubs, low emission zones, congestion pricing, electric vehicles, and hydrogen vehicles. This model included seven control variables: year, GDP, implementation costs, geographic scale, environmental benefits, and transport share of energy consumption and carbon emissions. Mobility hubs and electric vehicles ranked are top effective policies with carbon elasticities of 3.73 and 3.72, effect sizes of 127.47 and 86.73, and confidence intervals of [65.55, 107.93] and [106.17, 148.78], respectively. Followed by the low emission zone of 16.3 carbon elasticity, proving its cost-effectiveness, effect size of 10.16, and a confidence interval of [-2.48, 22.80]. Congestion pricing, despite having the highest effect size of 873.39, its confidence interval [-354.01, 2100.80] is wide, indicating the uncertainty of this effect. Shared bikes and hydrogen vehicles ranked lowest, suggesting a need for deeper life cycle-based analysis. Although this model displayed high accuracy, the findings' interpretation should consider the inherent data limitations.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available