4.6 Article

Analyzing the Effects of Car Sharing Services on the Reduction of Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su10020539

Keywords

shared-use vehicle; greenhouse gas; sharing economy; collaborative consumption; sustainable transportation; discrete choice model

Funding

  1. Korea Ministry of Environment (MOE) as part of the Climate Change Correspondence Program [2014001300001]

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This study examines the environmental impacts of roundtrip car sharing services by investigating transportation behavior. Car sharing should contribute to reduced greenhouse gas GHG emissions; however, such schemes include both positive and negative environmental effects, including: (1) reduced CO(2)e (carbon dioxide equivalent) from substituting private vehicle use for more fuel-efficient car sharing vehicles, (2) increased CO(2)e as car-less individuals switch from public transit to car sharing vehicles and (3) reduced CO(2)e due to fewer vehicles. This study examines the impacts of this modal shift on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions using three types of models: a mixed logit model to analyze car sharing service preferences; a binary logit model to analyze whether individuals are willing to forgo vehicle ownership or planned purchases to use car sharing services; and a linear regression to determine how much private vehicle or public transportation use would be replaced by car sharing and the resulting effects on mobility. Total emissions from the current car sharing market equal 1,025,589.36 t CO(2)e/year. However, an increase in electric vehicle (EV) charging stations to 50% of the number of gasoline-fuel stations would increase the probability of electric car sharing vehicle use, thereby reducing emissions by 655,773 t CO(2)e. This study shows that forgoing vehicle purchases does not offset the increased GHG emissions caused by the shift from public transportation or private vehicle use to car sharing.

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