Abstract
Electric vehicles require sufficient public charging infrastructure. This in turn necessitates detailed information on charging demand. In this paper we present a four-step approach to estimating public charging demand of electric vehicles. Previous methods are limited in their ability to provide differentiated results and adapt to future developments. Therefore, we account for user groups (private, carsharing, commercial), technical developments (vehicles, infrastructure), infrastructure availability, and carsharing development (operational area, business models, autonomous vehicles). Our approach also considers the interactions between these factors and allows for scenario analysis yielding the quantity and spatial distribution of public charging demand. We demonstrate our approach for Berlin, Germany. We find that the majority of public charging demand results from carsharing. This demand is concentrated in the city center, even when carsharing is available citywide. Public charging demand for commercial users is relatively low and located outside the city center. For private users, public charging demand shifts to the city center with an increasing market penetration of electric vehicles and technological advancements (increased range, charging speed). Public demand from private users increases dramatically when private infrastructure is absent. Finally, public charging demand shifts to the city center when private users do not have private infrastructure.
Highlights
IntroductionNumerous approaches have been developed to estimate public charging demand of electric vehicles
From the “Accelerated” scenario, the share of public charging demand increases significantly, and in the “Autonomous Driving” scenario it is more than 85%
We present an approach to estimate the charging demand for electric vehicles in an urban setting for various user groups and future development pathways
Summary
Numerous approaches have been developed to estimate public charging demand of electric vehicles. It is not clear who will use the bulk of electric vehicles and how they will be used. Private users can modify their travel behavior to some extent, but their public charging is strongly affected by the ability to charge privately at home. Flexible carsharing users typically only complete a single trip and these vehicles require public charging infrastructure. Commercial users follow fixed routes and may have access to private infrastructure. Public charging demand will very likely differ based on the user group in question. Differences in charging demand per user groups are not yet known
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