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EXAMINING INDIRECT NETWORK EFFECTS IN THE ELECTRIC VEHICLE MARKET SYSTEM
Abstract
Reduction in transportation carbon emissions is a crucial enabler to a net-zero future.
As decarbonization efforts increase, many states and the federal government are considering
methods to catalyze transportation electrification. This study examines California’s
light-duty vehicle (LDV) market's electrification, focusing on capturing EV market
behavior that entails: (1) the influence of socioeconomic and demographic variables
on the market, (2) the indirect network between electric vehicle (EV) adoption and
EV charging infrastructure (EVCS), and (3) adoption and deployment forecast scenarios.
The study uses panel data of EV, EVCS, and socioeconomic variables to perform (1)
regression analyses and (2) bass diffusion modeling. This study found that median
household income and share of owner-occupied housing were most significant to EV adoption
and EVCS deployment. The presence of positive bidirectional network effects was verified,
with stronger network impacts observed from EVCS than that observed from EVs. The
rate of EV and EVCS diffusion until market saturation depends on the current adoption
and size of the addressable market.
Type
Master's projectDepartment
Nicholas School of the EnvironmentSubject
electric vehiclecharging stations
indirect network effect
bass diffusion
instrumental variable regression
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27154Citation
Forest, Jade; Jhaveri, Dhruv; Owens, Katherine; & Sirison, Nannaphat (2023). EXAMINING INDIRECT NETWORK EFFECTS IN THE ELECTRIC VEHICLE MARKET SYSTEM. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27154.Collections
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