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Original Articles

Modeling different penetration rates of eco-driving in urban areas: Impacts on traffic flow and emissions

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Pages 282-294 | Received 04 Apr 2016, Accepted 22 Oct 2016, Published online: 04 Nov 2016
 

ABSTRACT

Climate change and air quality are two main environmental challenges in metropolitan areas. As road transportation is one of the main contributors, public administrations are facing these problems with a number of complementary policy measures: shift to cleaner modes, new fuels and vehicle technologies, demand management, and the use of information and communication technologies (ICT) applied to transportation. Eco-driving is one of the measures that present large fuel savings at individual level. Although these savings are well documented in the literature, few studies focus on how eco-drivers driving patterns affect the surrounding vehicles and the traffic in general, and more particularly what would be the impact when the number of eco-drivers grows. Using a traffic microsimulation tool, four models in urban context have been built, corresponding to the different types of urban roads. Both the base-case and the parameters setting to simulate eco-driving have been calibrated with real data collected through floating vehicles performing the trips with normal and eco behaviors. In total, 72 scenarios were simulated, varying the type of road, traffic demand, and the percentage of eco-drivers. Then, the CO2 and NOx emissions have been estimated through a microscopic emission model. The results show that in scenarios with low or medium demand levels and increasing number of eco-drivers, the effects are positive in terms of emissions. On the other side, with high percentage of eco-drivers and high traffic demand, the emissions rise. Higher headways and smooth acceleration and decelerations increase congestion, producing higher emissions globally.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge the collaboration of the City of Madrid and Madrid Calle-30 in the process of data collection.

Funding

This work was supported in part by the European Commission under the ICT-Emissions project Citation2011Citation2015, “Development of a methodology and tools for assessing the impact of ICT measures in road transport emissions,” Grant Agreement No. 288568.

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