1 / 18

How do we fund our roads? A case of decreasing revenue from electric vehicles

How do we fund our roads? A case of decreasing revenue from electric vehicles. Alan Jenn PhD Candidate Carnegie Mellon University. Running out of money for our transportation infrastructure.

mills
Download Presentation

How do we fund our roads? A case of decreasing revenue from electric vehicles

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. How do we fund our roads? A case of decreasing revenue from electric vehicles Alan Jenn PhD Candidate Carnegie Mellon University

  2. Running out of money for our transportation infrastructure Source: Bradley, Bill, Tom Ridge, David Walker. “Road to Recovery: Transforming America’s Transportation”. Leadership Initiative on Transportation Solvency. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 2011. p.17

  3. Where do transportationfunds come from? Image Sources: http://cimg.internetbrands.com/www.carsdirect.com/330x185/564/used-car-dealer-prices-1564.jpghttp://newsbusters.org/sites/default/files/main_photos/2012/February/Gas%20223.jpg http://www.plateshack.com/y2k/Pennsylvania5/pa2013sticker.jpg

  4. Variance of annual fees by state • Arizona • Colorado • Louisiana • Michigan • Minnesota • Wyoming • Arkansas • California • Florida • Hawaii • Idaho • Iowa • Kansas • Maryland • Missouri • Montana • New Hampshire • New Jersey • New Mexico • New York • North Dakota • Oklahoma • Rhode Island • South Dakota • Texas • Virginia • Washington • Alabama • Alaska • Connecticut • Delaware • Georgia • Illinois • Indiana • Kentucky • Maine • Massachusetts • Mississippi • Nebraska • Nevada • North Carolina • Oregon • Pennsylvania • South Carolina • Tennessee • Utah • Vermont • West Virginia • Wisconsin

  5. No use fees for electric vehicles (EVs) • When EVs operate on battery power, traditional forms of revenue flow is bypassed • Is this a problem for transportation revenues? Image Sources: http://www.extremetech.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/Nissan_Leaf.jpg http://www.blogcdn.com/www.autoblog.com/media/2011/01/volt-charging-port.jpg

  6. Sales of EVs are small, for now… Figure 1: Historical Sales of Electric Vehicles by Model Figure 2: EIA Forecasts of Electric Vehicle Sales by category

  7. Lifetime fees from a Toyota Camry Figure 3: Spatial breakdown of lifetime fees for Toyota Camry

  8. Lifetime fees from a Chevrolet Volt Figure 4: Spatial breakdown of lifetime fees for Chevrolet Volt

  9. Lifetime fees from a Nissan Leaf Figure 5: Spatial breakdown of lifetime fees for Nissan Leaf

  10. Predicting losses in future revenue

  11. Average distribution of Prius sales over the last decade Figure 6: Percentage of Prius sales versus total sales by state

  12. Difference in distribution of Prius sales versus total sales over the last decade Figure 7: Difference in percentage of Prius sales versus total sales and average percent sales by model, by state

  13. Decrease in funding likely to be several hundred million dollars by 2025 • On a national scale, impact is relatively small but growing • Higher rates of EV adoption will compound existing issues with transportation infrastructure funding deficits • Future planning to address issue is necessary Figure 8: Annual revenue decreases from EVs

  14. Other funding schemes • Annualized fees (likely coupled through registration fees) • Link to initial price of the vehicle • Use fee based on mileage of vehicle

  15. Sensitivity analysis on possible revenue generation plans Figure 9: Cumulative revenue sensitivity to a percent MSRP based registration fee Figure 10: Cumulative revenue sensitivity to a per mile based use fee

  16. Conflicting policies

  17. Conclusions, Future Work • Small (~1% by 2025) but growing problem needs to be addressed • Finding the right solution is tricky and politically difficult • Examine effects of alternative revenue generation policies on total fleet funds • Equity issues?

  18. Acknowledgments Thanks to the Center for Climate and Energy Decision Making for funding and to my advisor InêsAzevedo

More Related