1 / 19

Dimitris Potoglou Pavlos S. Kanaroglou

PROCESSUS 2nd International Colloquium on the Behavioural Foundations of Integrated Land-use and Transportation Models: Frameworks, Models and Applications. Potential Demand for Household Alternative Fuelled Vehicles: An Internet Survey Instrument. Dimitris Potoglou Pavlos S. Kanaroglou.

rona
Download Presentation

Dimitris Potoglou Pavlos S. Kanaroglou

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PROCESSUS 2nd International Colloquium on the Behavioural Foundations of Integrated Land-use and Transportation Models: Frameworks, Models and Applications Potential Demand for Household Alternative Fuelled Vehicles: An Internet Survey Instrument Dimitris Potoglou Pavlos S. Kanaroglou Centre for Spatial Analysis School of Geography and Geology McMaster University

  2. Outline • Development Trends in the Automotive Industry • Research Questions / Objectives • Modelling Approach • Data Collection: Internet Survey • Anticipated Outcomes and Next Steps

  3. Development Trends

  4. Research Questions / Objectives • What are the major vehicle attributes and household characteristics influencing vehicle transactions and vehicle-type choice? • What are the major factors and trade-offs of vehicle attributes for switching from conventional to alternative fuelled vehicle technologies? • How can we simulate future vehicle demand allowing for scenario building and policy implications regarding alternative fuelled vehicle technologies?

  5. Modelling Framework

  6. Data Requirements • Revealed (actual) Preferences: • Vehicle transactions and • Vehicle -Type Choices • Stated (hypothetical) Choices: • Hypothetical Vehicle Transactions • Hypothetical Vehicle - Technology/Type Choices

  7. The CIBER-CARS Survey Choice Internet Based Experiment for Research on CARs

  8. Stage 1: Revealed Preferences

  9. Stage 2: Stated Choices Experiment

  10. Stage 2: Experimental Design [2] • Experimental Design: • 413 Orthogonal Main Effects Matrix in 64 Scenarios. • 213 Endpoint and Main Effects and Interactions - within the alternative options - Effects in 64 Scenarios. • Total Design Matrix includes 128 Scenarios. • Out of 128 Scenarios, respondents receive 8 scenarios • 4 are taken from the first 64 scenarios, and • 4 are taken from the second 64 scenarios.

  11. A Stated Choices Exercise

  12. Survey Implementation • Information about the survey was posted on the local intranets of: • The City of Hamilton, and • The Hamilton Health Sciences (short time) • An invitation e-mail was distributed to: • McMaster University Employees, Faculty and Staff • Recipients of the e-mail were asked to forward the message to others living in the study area.

  13. Sample Description • Data collection: • March 21 – April 30, 2005 • 902 respondents participated from all municipalities of Hamilton CMA. • 530 stated that they would buy a vehicle in the next 5 years (stage 2) -> 496 eligible responses. • 496 * 8 exercises = 3968 observations

  14. Response Activity

  15. Spatial Distribution of the Sample

  16. Descriptive Analysis of Vehicle Choices

  17. Anticipated Outcomes and Next Steps • Improve our understanding on how urban households make vehicle-transactions and type-choice decisions. • Estimation of discrete choice models will contribute to the development of a decision making modelling system accounting for both conventional and alternative vehicle technologies. • Simulation results will characterize the role of alternative fuelled vehicles in improving urban air quality.

More Related