ESD
Ph.D. Alum Anup Bandivadekar
on
how to slash vehicle fuel use
Nancy
Stauffer, MIT
Energy Initiative – May
5, 2008
It
is possible to slash fuel use by all
vehicles on U.S. roads to pre-2000
levels within a few decades, but doing
so would require immediate action
on several challenging fronts, according
to a new analysis by MIT researchers.
Left
unchecked, U.S. vehicle fuel use is
expected to rise to about 765 billion
liters of gasoline equivalent per
year by 2035, up 35 percent from 2005,
according to the researchers. Their
analysis shows, however, that hybrids,
plug-in hybrids and other advanced
vehicle systems could be incorporated
into America's vehicle fleet rapidly
enough to make a significant dent
in total fuel use by 2035. Reductions
would come faster if Americans were
to start to use technology improvements
to make mainstream gasoline vehicles
more fuel efficient, and to adopt
measures to slow the growth in demand
for vehicles and the distance they
travel.
Among
the biggest hurdles will be changing
consumer expectations. In order to
make a dent in fuel use, vehicle makers
will have to emphasize fuel efficiency
over other vehicle improvements. In
other words, consumers will need to
understand that next year's model
won't necessarily accelerate faster
or be bigger than last year's model,
but it will get more miles per gallon.
"The
magnitude of the changes required
to achieve these reductions is daunting,
especially as current trends all run
counter to those changes," said
Anup Bandivadekar, who until recently
was a postdoctoral associate in the
MIT Energy Initiative and is now an
analyst at the International Council
on Clean Transportation. John B. Heywood,
the Sun Jae Professor of Mechanical
Engineering and director of MIT's
Sloan Automotive Laboratory, Bandivadekar
and others developed the models key
to the study.
Research
has shed light on future fuel economy
and emissions improvements possible
with specific technologies. But knowing
the potential impact on total fuel
use and emissions requires understanding
how quickly those technologies are
likely to get on the road, how much
difference they will make and when.
Bandivadekar
and colleagues set out to answer those
questions. "Like everyone else,
we don't have the ability to predict
the future," said Bandivadekar,
who received his PhD from MIT's Engineering
Systems Division earlier this year.
"So we develop various transportation
scenarios, each of which combines
a number of vehicle technologies,
assuming that their market shares
grow at different-but plausible-rates
between now and 2035. We then assess
the impact of each scenario on fleet-wide
fuel use and emissions."
Conversely,
given a fuel use or emissions target,
their methodology can determine plausible
pathways for getting there.
The
researchers compared fuel use for
different scenarios that would meet
projected demand for light-duty vehicles
between now and 2035. For each, they
assumed that half of all technology
improvements would be used directly
to increase fuel economy, a variable
they call "emphasis on reducing
fuel consumption," or ERFC.
In
the first scenario, by 2035 the advanced
technologies considered in the study-turbocharged
gasoline, diesels, gasoline hybrids
and plug-in hybrids-have gained fractions
of the U.S. market, but over a third
of all cars sold are still conventional
gasoline internal combustion engine
vehicles. In the second, battery development
stalls, hybrids remain expensive,
but turbocharged gasoline and diesel
vehicles do well, taking over 75 percent
of the market by 2035. The third scenario
assumes that hybrids and plug-in hybrids
succeed and by 2035 they make up 55
percent of the market.
The
hybrid-strong scenario gives the largest
cut in fuel use. Further, if combined
with 100 percent ERFC, fuel use in
2035 is almost 40 percent lower than
it would be if no action were taken.
"Now
you're talking really big reductions,"
Bandivadekar said. "Despite enormous
growth in demand, fuel use in 2035
would be lower than it was in 2000."
The
overall message? "If our goal
is to achieve deep, long-term reductions
in fuel use and emissions we should
do all these things-increase the ERFC,
improve today's engines, increase
the market penetration rate of advanced
propulsion technologies and find ways
to reduce the rate of growth in demand.
With that combination we can get very
deep cuts by 2035," Bandivadekar
said. "To make those things happen,
we need strong, long-term policies
and we need to adopt them now because
the longer we wait the higher the
starting point is and the more difficult
the task."
Funding
came from the Martin Family Society
Fellowship for Sustainability, the
Ford-MIT Alliance, Concawe, Eni S.p.A.,
Shell Hydrogen and Environmental Defense.
For
more information, go to http://web.mit.edu/mitei/research/spotlights/hybrids.html.
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