Abstract

The emissions of CO2 gas caused by transport in urban areas are increasingly serious, and the public transport sector plays a vital role in society, especially when considering the increased demands for mobility. New energy technologies in urban mobility are being introduced, as evidenced by the electric vehicle. We evaluated the positive environmental effects in terms of CO2 emissions that would be produced by the replacement of conventional urban transport bus fleets by electric buses. The simulation of an electric urban bus conceptual model is presented as a case study. The model is validated using the speed and height profiles of the most representative route within the city of Madrid—the C1 line. We assumed that the vehicle fleet is charged using the electric grid at night, when energy demand is low, the cost of energy is low, and energy is produced with a large provision of renewable energy, principally wind power. For the results, we considered the percentage of fleet replacement and the Spanish electricity mix. The analysis shows that by gradually replacing the current fleet of buses by electric buses over 10 years (2020 to 2030), CO2 emissions would be reduced by up to 92.6% compared to 2018 levels.

Highlights

  • Global warming continues to be one of the main problems the planet is facing, and transport is one of the most damaging sectors

  • The results showed that a light electric vehicle consumed up to eight times less energy than a petrol powered vehicle, with the advantages of not emitting CO2, NOx, HC, CO, and suspended particles (PM2.5, PM10 )

  • The final part of this paper considers the gradual replacement of the fleet and its effect on the reduction of CO2 emissions

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Summary

Introduction

Global warming continues to be one of the main problems the planet is facing, and transport is one of the most damaging sectors. According to reports by the International Energy Agency (IEA), in 2015, 32,250 MtCO2 were emitted by combustible fuel throughout the planet (44.9% by coal, 34.6% by oil, 19.9% by gas, and 0.6% by other fuels [1]). Of these emissions, the transport sector is the second largest producer, contributing 24% of the total, only behind the electricity and heat sector, which contributes 42%. Road transport emissions cause two fundamental problems: (1) local order, since transport causes high levels of noise and pollution in urban areas (PM10 , PM2.5 , NOx, HC, CO), and (2). The European Union (EU), looking at Horizon 2020, ruled on April 23, 2009 to implement the “DIRECTIVE 2009/28/EC OF THE

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