Are Battery Electric Vehicles a Possibility to Decrease CO2 Emissions?


Studienarbeit, 2017

19 Seiten, Note: 85


Leseprobe


2
CO
2
emissions from BEVs due to their power source, and to help understand their true emissions abate-
ment potential in the transport sector. A literature review was first conducted in order to establish current
transport emissions and abatement options, detail the electric vehicle option, and how this was related to
the carbon intensity of the power supply. The scope of the modelling undertaken was confined to light
vehicle emissions in metropolitan Melbourne, taking into consideration the most recent estimates of traf-
fic data in Melbourne and annual CO
2
emissions from passenger vehicles. The study then involved vary-
ing the power generation mix and hence the CO
2
intensity of electricity production to see the effect on
carbon emissions from charging BEVs. It was hypothesized that EVs may not be as `green' as one might
think, and if their power source is of a very high emissions intensity, they may be in fact worse for the
environment than traditional combustion vehicles from an operational standpoint. Only the technical po-
tential for vehicle emission intensity reductions to mitigate greenhouse gases was considered in this pa-
per, as the economic potential has been found to be much smaller (Michaelis & Davidson, 1996).
2
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1
Transport sector emissions and trends
On a global scale, transport was the second highest CO
2
emitting sector in OECD countries behind energy
and heat in 2015 contributing to 30% of total CO
2
emissions, up from 25% in 2010 (IEA, 2017). This
growth in vehicle emissions does not seem to be slowing down. China alone has been predicted to in-
crease vehicle ownership to over 600 million cars by 2050, nearly a ten-fold increase from 2009 figures
(Hao, Wang & Ouyang, 2010). India, too, has seen increasing trends in vehicle ownership and emissions.
The number of registered road vehicles has risen from 5.4 million in 1980 to 72.7 million in 2003 (Rama-
chandra & Shwetmala, 2009), with road transport accounting for 80% of all transport sector emissions in
India (Franco, Mandla & Ram Mohan Rao, 2017). Rising vehicle ownership and emissions trends, cou-
pled with increasingly rising global temperatures, give rise to a clear need for emissions reduction in
transport (Michaelis & Davidson, 1996).
On a national scale, Australia's transport sector in 2014 was also the second highest greenhouse gas
emitting sector behind stationary energy, responsible for 18% of the country's total emissions. Road
transport accounted for approximately 85% of emissions within the sector (Commonwealth of Australia,
2016). Figure 1 illustrates Australia's predicted `business as usual' transport sector emissions up to 2050.
This projection shows transport emissions are on an upward trend, with the biggest contribution coming
from the light road vehicles category. This indicates that CO
2
abatement efforts should bias the light road
sector, further motivating the need to investigate the true CO
2
reduction potential of BEVs. The problem
this then inspires is determining the optimal strategy or method for achieving this.

3
2.2 Abatement Options
Various studies have been undertaken in determining different approaches and strategies for emissions
reductions in the road transport sector. Stanley, Hensher and Loader (2011) suggested six different meth-
ods in which emissions might be reduced in the Australian road transport sector. They concluded that sig-
nificant behavioural and technological changes are required to cut substantial emissions from the sector,
with the key area being vehicle emission intensity. Yang, McCollum, McCarthy and Leighty (2008) in-
vestigated the potential for California to reduce its transportation emissions by 80% on 1990 levels by
2050. The paper proposed multiple scenarios focusing on three areas; improving vehicle efficiency, re-
ducing fuel carbon intensity, and reducing travel demand. It was found that if advancements in fuel and
vehicle technologies such as various electric vehicle types became clean enough, "California [could] pre-
serve its current levels of mobility" (Yang et al., 2008, p. 156). Hickman and Banister (2007) discovered
similar results modelling future transport CO
2
emissions in the UK. The study targeted a 60% reduction in
emissions by 2030. It was found that car traffic could increase by 35% on 2000 levels while still achiev-
ing the 60% CO
2
reduction in the sector if hybrid vehicle technologies were pushed hard enough. As
such, there is convincing evidence to suggest advancements and adoption of various EV technologies
could greatly mitigate future transport emissions around the globe
Figure 1. Project Greenhouse gas emissions by Australian transport sector. [Source: Cosgrove, Gargett, Evans, Graham & Ritzinger 2012a)]

4
In 2012, the Australia Low Carbon Transport Forum (ALCTF) was formed by combining industry ex-
perts from various organisations to investigate the options for greenhouse gas abatement in Australia's
transport sector. A summary report was produced in 2012, which primarily identified the following:
There are four general strategies available to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in transport. They are:
· Reduce the emission intensity of transport fuels
· Improve the fuel efficiency of transport to that less fuel is required
· Reduce the amount of transport required to meet society's needs
· Remove and store the emissions after they have been created
(Cosgrove, Gargett, Evans, Graham & Ritzinger., 2012a, p. 8)
A total of 47 abatement options under the preceding strategies were considered. The study initially
considered the individual impact of abatement options in isolation from other options, but then extended
to consider the impact of options when combined in sequence. Cosgrove et al. (2012a) noted that "in real-
ity abatement options will co-exist and these options can substantially reduce the impact of each other
when acting together" (p. 14). In both cases, the option with the highest abatement potential (in Mt CO
2
-
e) was electric/plug-in cars. Various other studies have also agreed with this (Perujo & Ciuffo 2010; van
Vliet et al. 2011; Climate Change Authority, 2014).
However, the technical report on which the above summary report was based appeared to include one
key oversight. Cosgrave, Gargett, Evans, Graham and Ritzinger (2012b) calculated their emissions sav-
ings based on the assumption that the carbon intensity of electricity generation in Australia would de-
crease substantially by 2050. More specifically, Cosgrave et. al (2012b) assumed that the tonnes of CO
2
equivalent per megawatt-hour (tCO
2
-e/MWh) decreased from a predicted 0.771 in 2020, to 0.209 in 2050.
As the potential for EVs to reduce transport emissions relies heavily on the carbon intensity of electricity
generation (Casals, Martinez-Laserna, García & Nieto, 2016), reducing the future carbon intensity by
such a large amount has the potential to over-estimate possible abatement. A more conservative estimate
could have been used, such as the `medium global action' case of 0.730 tCO
2
-e/MWh as suggested by the
Commonwealth of Australia's (2011) carbon price modelling report. This is discussed further in section
2.4. The need to study the true abatement potential of BEVs when taking into account their indirect emis-
sions from electrical power generation is clearly evident.
2.2
Electric Vehicle Option
Battery electric vehicles, or BEVs, offer an alternative mode of transport to conventional ICE-based vehi-
cles, and have the potential to decrease transport CO
2
emissions. BEVs are a category of electric vehicle
that involve an all-electric drivetrain and are powered from energy stored in chemical batteries, most
commonly being nickel-based and lithium-based varieties These differ from other EV types, including

5
fuel-cell vehicles that directly convert the chemical energy of a fuel into electrical energy, and hybrid
electric vehicles that utilise a number of power sources and power trains in tandem (Ehsani, Gao, Gay &
Emadi 2005). As BEVs do not rely on the combustion of a fuel such as oil, they do not produce any tail-
pipe emissions. An additional benefit of this is helping to reduce localised pollution around dense urban
areas (Casals et al., 2016). When compared to conventional ICE vehices, BEVS also have more efficient
powertrains. This can be attributed to smaller energy losses, such as from regenerative breaking to re-
charge batteries, and fewer moving parts (Campanari, Manzolini & de la Iglesia, 2009; Gantt, Perkins,
Alley & Nelson, 2011). One study found that for a 50km/day journey, an ICE vehicle required
40kWh/day on average, compared to just a 10kWh/day average for an electric vehicle, representing a
75% saving in total energy (Perujo & Ciuffo, 2010). However, these higher operational efficiencies and
reliance on batteries do not come without cost. During the manufacturing phase of a BEV, a higher envi-
ronmental impact is incurred than for a comparable ICE vehicle primarily due to the high GHG intensity
of battery production (Notter et al., 2010). Correspondingly, the electricity consumed by a BEV during
the use phase is primarily sourced from the existing electricity grid, which, as mentioned previously, ac-
counts for largest amount of global CO
2
emissions as a sector (power generation).
This evidence suggests that although BEVs are directly responsible for less emissions, they may be in-
directly responsible for more. As the scope of this study did not include life-cycle analysis (and hence ig-
nored any manufacturing GHG emissions), it focused on indirect emissions related to the electricity gen-
eration required to charge EV batteries.
2.3
Electricity generation mix
As previously mentioned, BEVs produce no tailpipe emissions, so the emissions intensity of the electrici-
ty generation mix supplying charge to the vehicle is crucial in determining indirect emissions (Nicolay,
2000). Every country or region generates electricity from a different and specific mix of sources, with
each unit of electricity emitting a certain amount of CO
2
as a product of its generation. This is known as
the CO
2
intensity of a power source. The CO
2
intensity of each source is then combined with the overall
amount generated from that source to determine the average CO
2
intensity of a country or region's power
generation mix. This is usually expressed as a number, in grams of CO
2
per megajoule (gCO
2
/MJ) or
grams of CO
2
per kilowatt hour (CO
2
/kWh). The electricity generation mix, or electricity mix, is herein
referred to as how the "final energy consumption in a given geographical region is distributed by primary
energy sources" (Casals, Martinez-Laserna & García, 2016, p. 426). The electricity mix composition var-
ies greatly between regions or countries, and depends on the availability of resources, the type of energy
needs to be met, and government policy of that region (Planète Energies, 2015). For example, South Afri-
ca has an electricity mix CO
2
intensity of 265 gCO
2
/MJ (955 gCO
2
/kWh), a very high figure due to ap-
proximately 94% of power coming from fossil fuel combustion (CARMA, 2012). In contrast, the CO
2
in-
tensity of Norway's electricity mix is only 2gCO
2
/MJ (7.2 gCO
2
/kWh), attributable to over 95% of its

6
electricity originating from hydro-electric power plants (CARMA, 2012). As such, a BEV receiving its
charge from the South African electricity grid would have much higher CO
2
emissions, per unit of dis-
tance, than an identical vehicle charging in Norway.
3
METHODOLOGY
The aim of this study was to understand the indirect CO
2
emissions arising from the operation of BEVs
and their power generation, and to then compare this with equivalent ICE vehicle emissions. As such, da-
ta collection and analysis was implemented to carry out the study. Emission figures relating to ICE vehi-
cles were first estimated using census data and average passenger vehicle emissions, to determine annual
CO
2
emissions in Melbourne and emissions per unit distance. Next, the CO
2
intensity of the current elec-
tricity generation mix in Melbourne was calculated and combined to achieve a link between generating
the energy consumed by BEVs and CO
2
emissions. Finally, the "tank to wheel" energy use of BEVs was
estimated through energy consumption per unit distance travelled. A comparison could then be undertak-
en between BEV CO
2
emissions and average ICE vehicle CO
2
emissions, with sensitivity testing involv-
ing the carbon intensity of the power generation mix. Four different energy mix scenarios were modelled.
The following sections detail this further.
3.1
ICE vehicle data and emissions
Data was collected regarding current passenger vehicle use in Melbourne, along with various traffic data
and emissions intensity of ICE vehicles. The Australian Bureau of Statistics' (ABS, 2017) 2016 Survey of
Motor Vehicle Use, Australia, was used as the primary source of traffic data for this study. Average an-
nual distance travelled by passenger vehicles in Melbourne was found to be approximately 11,200km, or
30.68km per day. This was consistent with another paper estimating 29.2km for the average daily com-
mute in Melbourne (Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics (BITRE), 2015). Total
vehicle kilometres (TVKM) over the year was found to be 30,885 million for passenger vehicles in Mel-
bourne city. Additionally, 3,632,041 passenger vehicles were registered at this time.
Data showed that on average in 2016, passenger vehicles in Victoria were 9.8 years old. As such, the
emissions intensity of the current light vehicle fleet was taken as the average emissions intensity for new
light vehicles sold in Australia in 2006. This was found to be 230 gCO
2
/km in 2006 (Climate Change Au-
thority (CCA), 2014; National Transport Commission (NTC), 2016). This average considers petrol- and
diesel-based ICE passenger vehicles, with other fuel types such as hybrid/electric vehicles being excluded
for simplicity (as these constituted less than 5% of total passenger vehicles). These statistics were used to
calculate the average CO
2
emissions for the passenger vehicle cohort in Melbourne.

7
3.2
Power generation emissions
A vital part of this study was to determine the CO
2
emissions relating to the power generation mix in
Melbourne. As mentioned earlier, the CO
2
intensity of the power generation mix is generally expressed in
units of CO
2
produced per unit of electricity generated (gCO
2
/kWh). Each power source has a different
carbon intensity, with fossil fuels renewables constituting the different sources in Victoria. It was as-
sumed that the power mix of Victoria was applied equally across the state, and was as an approximate
measure for Melbourne's power mix. Victoria's current power generation mix was assumed to be equiva-
lent to the 2014-15 mix (most recent data), and was found to be sourced primarily from brown coal, with
renewables and then natural gas producing a minority share. The CO
2
intensity of Victoria's brown coal
and gas fired power plants was calculated using a weighted average based on generation capacity of each
plant, and then combined with the percentage generated from each fuel source. Table 1 summarises this
information. Data was collected from the Department of Industry, Innovation and Science (2016), De-
partment of the Environment (2015) and ACIL Tasman (2009). It should be noted that renewable sources
include biogas, wind, hydro and solar PV, and it was assumed that there were null CO
2
emissions from
these sources during electricity generation.
Table 1. Electricity generation mix data ­ Victoria 2014-15
Electricity Source
Quantity
(%)
CO
2
intensity
(gCO
2
-e/kWh)
Brown coal
85.69
1227
Natural gas
3.884
705.5
Renewable sources
10.43
0
Total
100.0
1079
A point must be made regarding the marginal emissions factor (MEF) The MEF considers the change
in carbon intensity of electricity generation due to an increase or decrease in produced power (Hawkes,
2010). This is different to the average emissions factor (AEF), which is the grid-average CO
2
intensity of
electricity generation. For instance, if BEVs were introduced in Melbourne this would increase the load
on the current grid. As such, power generators would need to increase their output or new generators
would need to begin producing power. This would affect the overall CO
2
intensity of the grid due to a
change in the power generation mix, which is captured by the MEF and hence making it a better measure
of CO
2
grid intensity. A study of the CO
2
intensity in the UK's grid showed that from 2002 to 2009, the
MEF measured 192 gCO
2
/MJ, compared with the AEF measuring 142 gCO
2
/MJ (Hawkes, 2010). This

8
can be
__
explained as an increase in energy demand is usually met by increasing production from plants
burning fossil fuels (Hawkes, 2010). Regrettably, as it is difficult to calculate MEFs due to requiring vast
knowledge of a grid's responses to demand changes, the AEF was used in calculations for this study.
Therefore, it is possible that the CO
2
emissions from adding BEVs to the system were underestimated, as
the MEF would have likely reflected a higher CO
2
intensity.
3.3
BEV power consumption
In order to attribute CO
2
emissions from power generation to BEVs, the rate at which they consume ener-
gy per unit distance was required. This `fuel' economy of BEVs is typically given in watt-hours per kilo-
metre (Wh/km). To calculate this, data regarding the capacity of the battery pack and associated range for
various EVs was collected. For example, a Nissan Leaf has a 30kWh battery pack and an associated
172km range (Nissan, 2017). As such, it is expected to consume energy at the rate of 0.174kWh/km
(174Wh/km). A list of common electric vehicles in Australia was compiled, and an average energy con-
sumption rate for these vehicles was calculated from manufacturer information (BMW, 2017; Mitsubishi,
2017; Nissan, 2017; Renault, 2017; Tesla, 2017).
To more accurately analyse BEV emissions, the charging efficiency was considered. This includes en-
ergy losses due to the EV charger as well as the battery efficiency. First, the efficiency of the instant
charger was found to be generally around 95% (Musavia et al, 2012). Secondly, the efficiency of the bat-
tery was found to be above 95% in standard conditions
but falling below this during fast charges (Kang,
Yan, Zhang & Du, 2014). As such, for this study an average of 90% total efficiency for the battery and
recharge system was applied, effectively increasing the effective energy consumption of BEVs by 10%.
Table 2 summaries the above data.
Table 2. BEV range and power consumption
Model
Range
(km)
Battery capacity
(kWh)
Power consumption
(Wh/km)
Effective consumption
(Wh/km)
Tesla Model S
539
100
185.5
206.1
Tesla Model X
565
100
177.0
196.7
Nissan Leaf
172
30
174.4
193.8
BMW i3
160
18.8
117.5
130.6
Renault Kangoo Z.E.
125
22
176.0
195.6
Mitsubishi i-Miev
96
16
166.7
185.2
Average
276.2
47.8
166.2
184.6

9
3.4
Assumptions and Limitations
Assumptions and limitations of this study not made clear in each section are detailed here. Analysis of
emissions for both BEVs and ICE-based vehicles was
limited to `tank-to-wheel' (TTW) analysis, excluding `well-to-tank' (WTT) analysis or a combination of
both (`well-to-wheel' analysis). TTW analysis involves only the contribution to emissions from the opera-
tion of the vehicle, with WTT contribution accounting for the upstream CO
2
emissions from "fuel extrac-
tion to the refueling station" (Silva, Goncalves, Farias & Mendes-Lopes, 2006, p441). As such, only
emissions relating to fuel consumption from operating an ICE vehicle, or electricity used to recharge a
BEV, were considered.
When data relating specifically to Melbourne was unavailable, this was substituted with relevant Vic-
torian data, and then Australian data (in order of preference). For example, it was assumed that each ICE
vehicle in the current fleet produced on average 230 gCO
2
/km, based on the Australian average and aver-
age vehicle age (section 3.1). This average takes into account all petrol and diesel light vehicles, taken to
be any road vehicle weighing under 3.5 tonnes, excluding motorcycles and commercial vehicles.
Other emissions attributable to light vehicle travel from ICE vehicles, such as nitric oxides (NOx),
volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and carbon monoxide (CO) were excluded from analysis. This was
due to the fact that although these pollutants have impacts to human health or have secondary greenhouse
effect impacts (that is, they can react with other atmospheric gases to form GHGs), they do not have di-
rect greenhouse effects on the environment. It is commonplace in literature to exclude secondary green-
house gases from emissions analysis.
For battery electric vehicles, it was assumed that the manufacturer quoted range was accurate for the
purposes of this study. It was also assumed that no efficiency losses occurred during the transmission of
generated electricity to charging point, although charging and battery efficiency was considered in section
3.3. However, under real world conditions the true energy consumption of BEVs may vary due to use of
auxiliaries (air-conditioning, radio), weather conditions and differing driving habits or styles (Badin et al.,
2013). Additionally, the feasibility of introducing a large amount of BEVs into the existing light vehicle
fleet was considered outside of the scope of this study.
4
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The following section of the study is split up into two sections. The first section will discuss the results
from modelling BEV CO
2
intensity based on differing energy mix scenarios, with comparison to ICEVs.
The second section will discuss the results from modelling total passenger vehicle emissions for Mel-
bourne and the potential abatement from introducing BEVs. It must first be noted that when comparing
the relative emissions intensity of BEVs to ICEVs, the average CO
2
intensity of new passenger vehicles
in Australia was considered in addition to the current fleet average. As such, 175g CO
2
/km was used as a

10
more relevant comparison figure, as this was the average emissions intensity for new light vehicles in
2015 (NTC, 2016). It should also be noted that this figure is quite high when compared to other regions,
for example in Europe an average new passenger vehicle in 2015 emitted only 124g CO
2
/km. Reasons for
this include Australian consumer preferences for heavier and more powerful vehicles, few government
incentives for lower emissions vehicles and lower fuel prices (NTC, 2016).
4.1
BEV CO
2
intensity
Figure 2 presents the carbon dioxide emissions per unit distance for BEVs, considering four energy
scenarios: charging from the existing Victorian grid mix, a 25% renewables mix, a 50% renewables mix,
and a 75% renewables mix. Two ICEV cases were also plotted; the average CO
2
intensity for the passen-
ger vehicle fleet in Australia in 2016, and the most recent average for new passenger vehicles sold (2015).
When modelling the three energy scenarios, the ratio of brown coal to natural gas electricity generation
from the 2014-15 case was kept constant. When calculating the operating CO
2
intensity for the BEVs, an
average effective energy consumption was used as per Table 2, which was then combined with the CO
2
intensity of the different energy mix scenarios to obtain operating emissions per unit distance. The results
from this modelling were certainly quite remarkable. They show that if a BEV was purchased today in
Melbourne and was charged from the equivalent of Victoria's 2014-15 energy mix, it would in fact be re-
sponsible for more emissions than the current average new passenger vehicle (199.2 gCO
2
/km and 174
gCO
2
/km respectively). Even if the energy mix was taken to be the 25% renewables scenario, battery
electric vehicles would only produce marginally less carbon emissions than the new average passenger
2016 fleet
average
new ICEV average
[ZELLBEZ]
25% Renewables
50% Renewables
75% Renewables
0
50
100
150
200
250
CO
2
in
te
ns
ity
(g
CO
2
/k
m)
BEV and ICE Vehicle CO
2
intensity
ICE vehicles
BEVs
Figure 2. Average carbon dioxide intensity of ICEVs and BEVs

11
vehicle. The benefit of BEVs is only truly seen when the 50% and 75% renewables cases are considered.
These cases allocated an electric vehicle carbon intensity of 111.2 gCO
2
/km and 55.59 gCO
2
/km, yielding
a respective emissions reduction of 36.10% and 68.05% over an average new passenger vehicle.
Figure 3 compares three popular BEVs operating in Melbourne with three top selling ICE vehicles of
the same class (Tesla model S with the Holden Commodore, BMW i3 with the Toyota Corolla, and Nis-
san Leaf with the Mitsubishi Mirage). A benefit of modelling three models was that each had varying
range and battery pack characteristics, and therefore different theoretical power consumption. The first
trend that can be observed was both larger BEVs and ICEVs produced more CO
2
, which is quite intuitive
due to their increased weight. As shown, The Tesla Model S was less carbon intensive for all modelled
electricity mix scenarios when compared to the comparable large passenger ICEV. However, both smaller
BEVs only produced less CO
2
emissions per kilometre for the 50% and 25% renewable scenarios. This
can be explained as smaller vehicles are generally marketed as more economic cheaper vehicles to run,
compared to larger vehicles where luxury and space are more important selling points. What is important
take away from this analysis is that in all of the simulated cases, BEVs were far from being `zero-
emission' vehicles when operated in Melbourne. Additionally, in some scenarios even with relatively ag-
gressive assumptions they are no better in terms of operating CO
2
intensity than standard fossil fuel burn-
ing vehicles. A key reason that may explain this is that Victoria's power generation mix has a very high
carbon intensity. The CO
2
intensity of the 2014-15 grid in Victoria was calculated to be 1079 gCO
2
-
0
50
100
150
200
250
Tesla Model S
Nissan leaf
BMW i3
CO
2
in
te
ns
ity
(g
CO
2
/k
m)
Common BEVs and comparable petrol model
Top selling comparable ICEV
2014-15 Mix
25% Renewables
50% Renewables
75% Renewables
Figure 3. Operating CO
2
emissions for BEVs under different power mix scenarios, with comparable ICEV

12
e/kWh, agreeing with literature estimating an intensity of 1130 gCO
2
-e/kWh for 2013 (Department of the
Environment, 2015). This figure is well above Australia's average and the average for various other coun-
tries (Ang & Su, 2016), as shown in Table 3. The primary reason for such carbon intensive electricity in
Victoria, and hence such high operational CO
2
emissions for BEVs, is that most of the power is generated
from brown coal-fired plants (ACIL Tasman, 2009), and it's associated high carbon content. Doucette and
McCulloch (2011) showed similar results when modelling BEVs in various countries. The paper found
that for China and India, countries with high CO
2
intensities, BEVs were not able to achieve a significant
emissions decrease, if at all. However, the paper also found that in regions of less carbon intensive power
generation, such as the United States and especially France, BEVs could provide a much more substantial
reduction in road transport CO
2
emissions.
4.2
Total vehicle emissions - Melbourne
In order to better gauge the actual potential CO
2
abatement of BEVs in Melbourne, a number of different
scenarios were modelled. This involved calculating the total annual passenger vehicle CO
2
emissions for
different cases, and analysing any reductions based on each case.
Table 3. Modelled electricity generation emissions intensities and other region comparisons
Region
CO
2
intensity
(gCO
2
-e/kWh)
Victoria 2014-15
1079
25% Renewables (modelled)
903
50% Renewables (modelled)
602
75% Renewables (modelled)
301
Australia
781
China
692
United States
486
France
55

13
6,8
6,9
7
7,1
7,2
7,3
7,4
7,5
7,6
7,7
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
An
nu
al
C
O
2
em
iss
io
ns
(Mt
CO
2
)
Base Case
Figure 4. Total passenger vehicle CO
2
emissions in Melbourne - Base case
Figure 4 represents the base case emissions for Victoria, from 2016 up to 2030. The base case repre-
sents a situation in which no BEVs are introduced into the fleet. It assumed that total vehicle kilometers
(TVKM), which were used to estimate total emissions, were increasing at 3.24% per annum, the average
growth rate over the last 50 years from 2012 (BITRE, 2012). It also assumed that ICE vehicle efficiency
was improving steadily, and hence a 2.59% drop in vehicle CO
2
intensity per year was applied (NTC,
2016). Therefore, total emissions are seen to peak in 2029 due to the decreasing rate of new vehicles'
emissions. Note that the vertical scale has been adjusted to amplify this trend, and as such does not begin
from zero. Annual emissions were shown to increase from 7.10 MtCO
2
to 7.57 MtCO
2
over the 14-year
period.

14
Figure 5 represents the `50/50' case. This case modelled a steady uptake of both 50% of BEVs into the
existing fleet, and 50% of renewables into the existing grid by 2030. The power generation mix carbon in-
tensity at 2016 was taken to be the same as the 2014-15 mix, and was linearly decreased to the 50% re-
newables intensity by 2030 (values shown in Table 3). This same uptake was emulated with introducing
BEVs into the fleet, increasing from 0% in 2016 to 50% of passenger vehicles in 2030. The blue graphed
area represents the base case emissions, with the orange showing the emissions from the above scenario.
Under the 50/50 case, 2030 annual vehicle emissions were found to be 6.47 MtCO
2
, yielding a 14.5% re-
duction from 2030 base case, or 8.91% reduction from 2016 base case. The results here show that even if
half of the entire passenger vehicle fleet is replaced by BEVs and half of the grid is replaced with renew-
able sources, both by 2030, there is not a major reduction seen in CO
2
emissions. Furthermore, the in-
creased amount of electricity that would be required to be generated from the operation of these BEVs
would place excess strain on the grid, but as explained in section 3.4 analysis of this was outside the study
scope.
0
2
4
6
8
2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030
An
nu
al
C
O
2
e
m
issi
on
s (
M
tCO
2
)
50/50 Case
50% BEVs/50% renewables by 2030
Figure 5. Total passenger vehicle CO
2
emissions - 50/50 Case

15
The second scenario was modelled was the `75/75' case. This was similar to the `50/50' case except a
steady uptake of 75% of both BEVS into the passenger vehicle fleet and renewables into the Victorian
grid by 2030 was analysed. The method for modelling this case was repeated from the `50/50' case. Ini-
tially, one can see from the figure that this case does in fact provide a significant potential reduction in fu-
ture carbon emissions for road transport. The results showed that in 2030, the `75/75' case achieved a
48.4% reduction from base case annual CO
2
emissions, and a 45.0% reduction from today's annual CO
2
emissions. This is clear evidence to suggest that if it were feasibly possible, an increase of both electric
vehicles on the road and clean power in the grid of this scale would have a meaningful effect on carbon
emissions produced in the road transport sector. It is also interesting to note that an increase of 25% in
both BEV and renewable energy uptake over the `50/50' case demonstrated over a three-fold decrease in
annual emissions in 2030.
The case for large scale adoption of battery electric vehicles in Melbourne based on their CO
2
reduction
potential and Victoria's current energy mix does not seem overly convincing. As the results have shown,
only a case in which three-quarters of both the grid is renewable and the vehicle fleet is electrified show
any significant emissions reductions results for the effort. To compound this, the economic implications
of such a situation have not been taken into account during this paper. For instance, the situation becomes
even more unviable when considering the capital cost premium that BEVs attract over ICE vehicles.
Studies have shown that electric vehicles are more cost competitive when lower ranges are required and
higher fuel prices are present (Werber, Fischer & Schwartz, 2009). As such, increasing the uptake of
BEVs into the fleet would need to be heavily incentivised through government policy to gain any traction
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030
An
nu
al
C
O2
emi
ss
io
ns
(M
tC
O2
)
75/75 Case
75% BEVs/75% Renewables by 2030
Figure 6. Total passenger vehicle CO
2
emissions - 75/75 Case

16
in Melbourne, but efforts would be much better focused on reducing the demand for travel and hence the
need to reduce emissions intensities by lowering the amount of kilometres travelled in total.
4.3
Suggestions for Further Research
As this paper necessitated many assumptions to be made about various future trends and for overall sim-
plicity, there is scope for further research regarding emissions abatement in the road transport sector. One
suggestion for further study would be to investigate the emissions abatement potential of a range of coun-
tries with varying electricity mixes to determine the relative CO
2
emissions of BEVs in each region. This
would help determine where electric vehicles would be the most viable option for emissions abatement.
In addition, this study has only looked at the potential for BEVs to reduce transport emissions in isolation
from other potential options. In reality, a number of options would likely be implemented in sequence to
achieve optimal results. CCA (2014) suggest that increasing the efficiency of motor vehicles, reducing the
emissions intensity of fuels, and more efficiently managing demand through mode shift and urban plan-
ning are key areas to be considered in conjunction with one another.
Research into the economic costs and benefits, as well as feasible implementation of BEVs also pro-
vides grounds for further study. For example, one could research the relative savings in fuel costs of
BEVs compared to the price premium they attract over petrol or diesel cars, or look into the feasibility of
range due to battery capacity and the limitation of the time and practicality involved with recharging bat-
teries.
Another limitation of this study and hence area for further investigation would be to consider upstream
and downstream emissions of BEVs compared to standard vehicles. This would involve conducting life-
cycle analysis, or well-to-wheel analysis, and would provide a clearer picture as to the total carbon emis-
sions involved in the lifespan of an electric vehicle, not just from operation.
Lastly, in reality it may be unrealistic to assume that Victoria can achieve 50-75% of its energy genera-
tion from renewable sources by 2030, assumed possible for this study. Trainer (2012) argues that it simp-
ly would not be possible to power the currently energy-intensive Australian society on solely renewable
power, as the total investment cost based on intermittency and plant redundancy is unaffordable. The pa-
per concludes by stating that energy and greenhouse problems cannot be solved by supply side actions
such as technical advancements, but demand side actions such as fundamental structural change to the
way society consumes its resources.

17
5
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Due to the recent and expected trends of passenger vehicle use and transport emissions globally, battery
electric vehicles are becoming an increasingly pivotal way in which to curtail future road transport emis-
sions. Although BEVs do not produce any tailpipe emissions, they depend strongly on electricity produc-
tion which is predominantly from non-renewable sources in Melbourne. This infers they are less `green'
than one may think, especially when taking into account life-cycle emissions such as from battery produc-
tion and disposal.
This study looked at the relationship between energy consumption of battery electric vehicles and the
CO2 emissions involved in generating electricity to charge them, and then compared this to the carbon
emissions from comparable internal combustion engine passenger vehicles. The results showed that given
the current carbon intensity of electricity generation, BEVs operating in Victoria did not provide any sig-
nificant emissions abatement potential compared to an average new passenger vehicle. In some cases and
for some particular models, they were found to be even more carbon intensive than ICE vehicle compari-
sons. The only modelled scenarios that showed noteworthy potential for BEVs to reduce emissions in the
transport sector was for the 50% renewables case and 75% renewables case, which yielded a respective
emissions reduction of 36.10% and 68.05% for BEVs over an average new passenger vehicle. The rea-
sons behind this revolved around Victoria's highly carbon intensive grid, suggesting that the ability of
BEVs to abate emissions would be more greatly realised in regions with cleaner electricity generation
mixes.
This study also looked at modelling the possible future emissions reduction in the road transport sector
by introducing BEVs into the existing fleet. This was done by varying the percentage uptake of BEVs in-
to the fleet as well as renewable energy sources into the grid. Results showed that due to the trend of
ICEV carbon emissions reducing over time, and again the high carbon intensity of electricity in Victoria,
a significant CO2 reduction was only achieved in the `75/75' case. As such, the ability for BEVs in Mel-
bourne to abate emissions could only occur for high fractional uptake of BEVs into the fleet and high
fractional uptake of renewable energy sources into the grid, although feasibility analysis of this scenario
was not considered.
This paper does not aim to present BEV adoption in a negative light. Instead, it should highlight the in-
centive for Victoria and other regions to reduce the carbon intensity of their power generation mixes, in
order to optimize the potential emissions reduction that the adoption of BEVs can accomplish.

18
6
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Ende der Leseprobe aus 19 Seiten

Details

Titel
Are Battery Electric Vehicles a Possibility to Decrease CO2 Emissions?
Hochschule
Monash University Melbourne
Veranstaltung
Environmental Engineering
Note
85
Autor
Jahr
2017
Seiten
19
Katalognummer
V375235
ISBN (eBook)
9783668526785
ISBN (Buch)
9783668526792
Dateigröße
601 KB
Sprache
Englisch
Schlagworte
Electric vehicles, EV, emissions, power generation mix, electricity, co2, transport, abatement, Melbourne
Arbeit zitieren
James McCutchan (Autor:in), 2017, Are Battery Electric Vehicles a Possibility to Decrease CO2 Emissions?, München, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/375235

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