Litcius/Paper detail

Exploring public charging infrastructure requirements for short-haul electric trucks

Jake Whitehead, Jake Whitehead, Jessica Whitehead, Jessica Whitehead, Michael P. Kane, Zuduo Zheng

2021International Journal of Sustainable Transportation33 citationsDOI

Abstract

Vehicle electrification has the potential to revolutionize transport systems globally by enabling a pathway toward lower-cost, zero-emission transport options. Heavy vehicles are poised to potentially be one of the greatest beneficiaries due to their high operating costs. Here a facility location problem approach is adopted to analyze a sample of deidentified truck trip data, providing initial insights into charging network configurations that could support a short-haul electric truck fleet using the case study of South East Queensland. The charging network scenarios include up to 10 optimally-located public sites. The results suggest that a relatively modest public charging network should be sufficient to support the majority of short-haul electric trucks operating in similar regions internationally, in line with other studies that have found that the majority of short-haul electric truck charging is likely to be carried out at depots. Additionally, in outlining limitations of this study, we highlight the need for greater cooperation between researchers, policy-makers and industry to secure access to high-resolution truck trip data to more accurately plan regional charging networks, and freight decarbonization more broadly.

Topics & Concepts

TruckElectrificationTransport engineeringPublic transportSample (material)Plan (archaeology)Electric vehicleBusinessComputer scienceEngineeringAutomotive engineeringElectricityGeographyPhysicsQuantum mechanicsChromatographyElectrical engineeringPower (physics)ChemistryArchaeologyElectric Vehicles and InfrastructureAdvanced Battery Technologies ResearchTransportation and Mobility Innovations