1. Introduction
More than 50% of the world’s population lives in urban areas, and it is estimated that by 2045 the number of people living in cities will increase up to 1.5 times—which is around 6 billion people [
1]. There are more than 1 billion motorized vehicles worldwide, and with rising income levels, one should expect continuous expansion [
2,
3]. As a result of high flows of people into cities, transport systems are on the verge of transformation. With rising numbers of people dwelling in urban areas, many challenging needs and problems arise regarding sustainable development, where the critical element is the sustainable transport. The importance of this issue is not only proven by the critical postulates of the Sustainable Development Goals [
4], but also by negative aspects current urban transport poses, such as elevated levels of air pollution or more frequent premature deaths from human exposure to harmful pollutants [
5]. Diseases caused by pollution were responsible for an estimated 9 million premature deaths in 2015 three times more deaths than from AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria combined and 15 times more than from all wars and other forms of violence [
6].
Sustainable urban transport has become more complex and more significant to sustainability policies [
6]. Thus researchers investigate this ongoing challenge through diverse and innovative means [
7,
8]. This problem is examined not only concerning modern metropolitan areas [
9], but also to cities in developing countries [
10,
11]. The vital role of transport in the sustainability of the cities has been ascertained in previous papers, motivating researchers to explore new solutions in the area [
12]. Consequently, new approaches have been proposed that aim to improve current transportation systems and solve prevailing environmental and economic aspects concerned with currently unsustainable transportation [
13,
14]. However, the previous works examine the problem of transport systems as a whole, often only regarding the supply chain, entirely omitting or briefly investigating specifically urban transportation [
15]. Furthermore, researchers in the sustainable city transport discipline need to consider a broad spectrum of criteria, such as environmental, economic, social, legal and political issues [
16]. Such multidimensional matter requires the use of various techniques to address this problem, such as fuzzy logic or multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) methods [
17,
18,
19]. Currently, the evaluation of sustainable transport is an emerging area that researchers handle more frequently with the use of MCDA methods, proven to be effective in such challenges [
20,
21,
22], as well as in evaluating other sustainable decision problems [
23,
24]. With growing attention towards sustainability assessment, one should also consider renewable energy sources, which is a popular subject in many kinds of research. Studies have shown that zero-emission energy sources, highly demanded by modern cities, are tending to be more accessible and cleaner [
25,
26]. Researchers have used various methods to investigate renewable energy sources problems, such as evaluating locations for offshore wind farms using PROMETHEE for Sustainability Assessment (PROSA) method [
27,
28], or investigating the design of wind farms using Analytic Network Process (ANP) and Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) methods [
29]. Consequently, with greener energy, studies showed that there is a rising interest in sustainable means of transport, such as electric vans or public city buses [
30,
31].
The key to sustainable urban transport is finding optimal means of transport, which would satisfy both the needs of the present and the future. In this area, multiple various research and practical initiatives undertaken in the recent years can be indicated [
32,
33,
34]. They include both works focused on formulating a strategy of building and developing sustainable city transport [
35,
36,
37], as well as papers of tactical [
38,
39,
40] and operational [
41] scope, focused for example on selection and evaluation of selected variants of sustainable city logistics [
42,
43,
44]. It should be pointed out that the dynamic development of technology allows to undertake new attempts in searching for new and updating the existing sustainable options in city logistics and transport (for example the search for a portfolio of apropriate variants of sustainable city transport should be conducted in multiple layers [
45] with the use of the complete set of available transport options [
46]. As other types of solutions, such as car sharing, proved to be promising sustainable transport fields, it should be pointed out that their optional coexistence in a single unified system of sustainable city logistics [
47,
48,
49,
50] should be considered with other pro-ecological variants of city logistics such as ebikes, emotors, bikes. Naturally, a holistic approach to sustainable city transport requires to take into account a set of external conditions (e.g., climate conditions), technical or urbanistic options, which condition obtaining the desired effects [
51] while sustaining an appropriate level of safety. As indicated, the coexistence of different modes of sustainable transport is therefore essential and in this context, the use of e-bikes may fill this gap. Electric bicycles are relatively cheap, and their cost of use is significantly lower compared to, e.g., fuel-powered personal cars [
52]. Furthermore, they create a great opportunity concerning more rapid movement around the city, especially in congested city centers and are more comfortable than other ecological means of transport, such as traditional bicycles. Electric bikes are less safe (higher speed of movement) and do not require any physical activity compared to traditional bikes. However, they empower many positive externalities such as negligible emissions of pollutants, reduction in harmful noise levels and impacting overall awareness towards a sustainable future, to name a few. Today, many modern cities are limiting the usage of combustion vehicles and some are planning to completely withdraw existing ones or ban future sales [
53]. With the encouragement of sustainable means of transport, one can expect an increasing trend towards electric vehicles in the foreseeable future [
54]. The dynamically developing technology causes that the set of available sustainable transport variants (e.g., ebikes, electric powered or hybrid cars, emotors) grows rapidly. In such context, it becomes necessary to develop methodological foundations for the evaluation of sustainable transport options. The specifics of this problem, implicating the natural lack of selected data (e.g., malfunction reports data, loss of value of newly-introduced variants over a few-year time span), result in the necessity to develop the methodological guidelines in the environment of incomplete knowledge in the model.
In this paper, the ongoing challenge of sustainable transport will be addressed, which is the selection of the most rational electric bicycle. The paper shows step by step how to identify multi-criteria decision-making assessment model. For this purpose, the Characteristic Objects METhod (COMET) is used, which was proven successful in other sustainable development problems [
55]. The COMET method, as one of the multi-criteria decision-analysis technique based on a rule set, is completely free of the rank reversal paradox, which is a key in a proper analysis [
56,
57]. The obtained model is used to rank the considered bicycles and choose the most rational from the set of ten proposed products. Methodically, work presents a successful attempt of building integrated, inference based model, that aggregates full data with incomplete expert knowledge. In a practical sense, the authors’ contribution is an attempt to build a reference ranking of ebikes for a carefully selected extensive set of ebikes, which can provide useful knowledge both for particular decision makers as well as for local communities and policy makers, where the evaluation and selection of sustainable transport variants is at stake.
The rest of the paper is organized as follows: in the next section, the Fuzzy Set Theory preliminaries are outlined. In
Section 3, the COMET method is described as a useful tool to identify multi-criteria decision models. Subsequently, in
Section 4, an experiment to build a decision model for an assessment of electric bicycles is described step by step, and the results are presented. The conclusions and the possible future directions are presented in
Section 5.
3. The Characteristic Objects Method
Many MCDM methods exhibit the rank reversal phenomenon; however, the Characteristic Objects Method (COMET) is completely free of the this problem. In previous works, the accuracy of the COMET method was verified [
68]. The formal notation of the COMET method should be briefly recalled [
62,
63,
64]. The whole decision-making process by using the COMET method is presented in
Figure 1.
Step 1.Definition of the space of the problem—the expert determines the dimensionality of the problem by selecting
r criteria,
. Then, a set of fuzzy numbers is selected for each criterion
, e.g.,
(
16):
where
are the ordinals of the fuzzy numbers for all criteria.
Step 2.Generation of the characteristic objects—the characteristic objects
are obtained with the usage of the Cartesian product of the fuzzy numbers’ cores of all the criteria:
As a result, an ordered set of all
is obtained:
where
t is the count of
s and is equal to:
Step 3.Evaluation of the characteristic objects—the expert determines the Matrix of Expert Judgment (
) by comparing the
s pairwise. The matrix is presented below:
where
is the result of comparing
and
by the expert. The function
denotes the mental judgement function of the expert. It depends solely on the knowledge of the expert. The expert’s preferences can be presented as:
After the
matrix is prepared, a vertical vector of the Summed Judgments (
) is obtained as follows:
Eventually, the values of preference are approximated for each characteristic object. As a result, a vertical vector P is obtained, where the row contains the approximate value of preference for .
Step 4.The rule base—each characteristic object and its value of preference is converted to a fuzzy rule as:
In this way, a complete fuzzy rule base is obtained.
Step 5.Inference and the final ranking—each alternative is presented as a set of crisp numbers, e.g., . This set corresponds to the criteria . Mamdani’s fuzzy inference method is used to compute the preference of the alternative. The rule base guarantees that the obtained results are unequivocal. The bijection makes the COMET completely rank reversal free.
4. Study Case
This paper presents the assessment model of decision-making concerning sustainable city transport. Selecting an optimal electric bike, especially considering multiple criteria, is a complex challenge. Such compound problems require the expert’s knowledge to establish the requirements for the model and therefore, based on the expert’s opinion, eight criteria were selected. Hence, the space of the investigated problem is equal to 8. Based on [
69,
70,
71,
72,
73,
74,
75,
76,
77,
78,
79,
80], the following criteria are specified:
—battery capacity, expressed in Ampere hours (Ah) [
73];
—charging time of the battery, expressed in hours (h) [
73,
74];
—number of gears (derailleur), expressed in units [
75];
—power of the engine, expressed in Watts (W) [
74,
76];
—the maximum speed reached solely by electric mode, expressed in kilometers per hour (km/h) [
78];
—driving range of the bicycle by electric mode using fully loaded battery, expressed in kilometers (km) [
77,
78];
—weight of the bicycle, including battery expressed in kilograms (kg) [
78];
—price in US dollars [
74,
79].
In this study case, the considered problem is simplified to a simple structure which is presented in
Figure 2. In that way, we have to identify four related models, where each one requires a lot smaller number of queries. The decision model can be presented as the following models:
battery effectiveness assessment model with two inputs (9 characteristic objects and 36 pairwise comparisons are needed);
engine assessment model with two inputs (9 characteristic objects and 36 pairwise comparisons are needed);
drive system assessment model with three inputs (27 characteristic objects and 351 pairwise comparisons are needed);
comfort of usage assessment model with two inputs (9 characteristic objects and 36 pairwise comparisons are needed);
electric bicycle assessment model with three inputs (36 characteristic objects and 351 pairwise comparisons are needed).
In
Table 1, criteria are presented along with their respective linguistic values.
Table 2 presents 10 exemplary ebikes along with the explanation of the model foundations, whereas the complete model for 64 bikes is presented in
Section 4.7.
In order to identify the final model for the electric bicycle assessment, we first have to determine the following assessment models, i.e., battery effectiveness, engine, drive system and comfort of the usage.
4.1. Battery Effectiveness Assessment Model
The expert identified two important criteria for the battery effectiveness assessment model, battery capacity, expressed in Ampere-hours [Ah] and charging time expressed in hours [H]. The former is a profit type criterion; hence the value increase implies the preference increase, whereas the latter is a cost-type criterion; hence the value increase implies the preference decrease. It should be noted that the relationship is rarely linear in such complex problems. The triangular fuzzy numbers of criteria
and
are depicted in
Figure 3. The characteristic objects
–
are created using the Cartesian product of the fuzzy numbers’ cores of criteria
and
and are presented in
Table 3. The space of the problem, including characteristic objects and alternatives, is presented in
Figure 4.
The expert performed 36 pairwise comparisons of the characteristic objects. As a result, the Matrix of Expert Judgment (MEJ) was determined, where each
value was calculated using the Equation (
21). The MEJ matrices are presented in
Figure 5 and
Figure 6, where the
values of either 0,
or 1 are represented by white, black and gray boxes, respectively. Consequently, the vector of the Summed Judgements (SJ) was calculated using Equation (
22), and hence, it was to used to calculate the values of preference (P), presented in
Table 3.
4.2. Engine Assessment Model
The expert identified two criteria for the engine assessment model, namely engine power, expressed in Watts [W] and maximum speed reached by electric bicycle in electric mode expressed in kilometers per hour [km/h]. Both are profit type criteria, hence as stated before, with the increase in values, preference increases. The triangular fuzzy numbers of criteria
and
are depicted in
Figure 3. The characteristic objects
–
are created using the Cartesian product of the fuzzy numbers’ cores of criteria
and
and are presented in
Table 4. The space of the problem, including characteristic objects and alternatives, is presented in
Figure 7.
4.3. Comfort of Usage Assessment Model
Two important criteria were selected for the engine assessment model, range, expressed in kilometers [km] and weight of the bicycle in kilograms [kg]. The first one is a profit type criterion and the second one is a cost-type criterion. The triangular fuzzy numbers of criteria
and
are shown in
Figure 3. The characteristic objects
–
are created using the Cartesian product of the fuzzy numbers’ cores of criteria
and
and are presented in
Table 5. The space of the problem, including characteristic objects and alternatives, is presented in
Figure 8.
4.4. Drive System Assessment Model
For the model of drive system assessment, the variables from previous models are used, namely battery effectiveness assessment model and the engine assessment model,
and
respectively. Additionally, the third criterion is included—the number of gears available in the bicycle derailleur system
. The aggregated variables
,
and criterion
are all profit type. The triangular fuzzy numbers of criterion
is presented in
Figure 3. The characteristic objects
–
are presented in
Table 6.
4.5. Electric Bicycle Assessment Model
The final model for the electric bicycle assessment has three input variables. Two aggregated variables were used, the output variable from the drive system assessment and the output variable from the comfort of usage assessment. Moreover, we include the third input—the criterion price
. The aggregated variables
,
are both profit type, whereas the criterion
is cost type. The triangular fuzzy numbers of criterion
is shown in
Figure 3. The characteristic objects
–
are presented in
Table 7.
4.6. Final Ranking
The final preference and the ranking for the ten considered alternatives of electric bicycles are presented in
Table 8. Concerning the case with the full knowledge, when we always assume the best value of the interval, then the best variant is bicycle Emu Crossbar (preference value
), slightly exceeding the Rattan bicycle (preference value
). Undoubtedly, the worst alternative is the ANCHEER Plus model (preference value
). The second worst, however, not that close to the least optimal one, is the Xiaomi QiCycle model (preference value
). The Emu Crossbar scored such high results due to the fact, that has the most extended range (up to 100 km) and the highest battery capacity (14.5 Ah), which outweighs its disadvantages, such as high price. However, when considering Rattan model (second best), it is worth stating that, although it has lower battery capacity than Emu Crossbar, it has also lower charging time (which is cost type), hence the overall preference for battery assessment is greater in Rattan model. Compared to Emu, Rattan is also two times cheaper and has a higher preference regarding engine assessment. However, its rather average range contributed to only second place.
However, these were the rankings under assuming full knowledge as the best value from the uncertainty intervals. When we do take them into account, the final ranking has to be interpreted differently—taking into example the Emu Crossbar, which the final preference interval is equal to [0.4219, 0.6119]. While considering the highest values from intervals made Emu clearly the the first, it is worth noticing how broad the interval is, mainly due to the fact that his range and his preference value for comfort of usage assessment have extensive intervals, 55–100 (km) and [0.3781, 0.8000], respectively. Thus, under some degree of uncertainty, the final ranking varies greatly. Hence, the Emu still might be first, but one has to be aware of the fact that considering the lowest values from the interval, Emu belongs closer to the end of the ranking.
On the contrary, the Rattan bicycle (second place), which also exhibits the problem of uncertainty, has a much lower range of the interval [0.5800, 0.6056]. Even with the lowest value, Rattan still has a high preference value (), whereas Emu had (). Therefore, interval numbers can be a useful indicator of the stability of the final ranking, under conditions of incomplete knowledge, which can easily change the definitive ranking of alternatives.
4.7. Practical Exploitation of the Identified Model
The proposed methodological aspects of the identification of the assessment model in the conditions of incomplete knowledge are presented on a set of 10 arbitrarily selected decision variants. In practice, the number of possible decision options is often much higher. Therefore, as a result of the analysis of literature and websites [
81,
82,
83,
84,
85,
86,
87], the set of evaluated variants was extended by another 54 decision alternatives. The extended set was assessed using the identified model and decision-making system available on
wwww.comet.edu.pl.
Table 9 presents the analyzed set together with the determined assessments of preferences (
P). The worst option was the California Bicycle Factory Retro S bike (with 0.3669 point). It had a low battery capacity (it was 8 ah), which was not compensated by charging time (it was 4 hours), low number of gears, low engine power, high weight, high price (
$2499) and average maximum speed. The next variant was only improved by 0.0229 of point. On the other hand, the best option was the Blix Sol bike, which was rated 0.687 of point. The parameters were mostly medium; however, the low price and big range were crucial to the victory of this option.
It can often happen that some parameters describing variants are uncertain, e.g., the maximum distance may depend on the weight of the passenger, orography of the city and the climate (cold climate shorter distance). The given catalog values are very often averaged experimental results, therefore it seems justified to use interval numbers. It is difficult to assume that the vehicle will be moved in the same conditions as in laboratory tests.
5. Conclusions
Sustainable development is becoming a more complex problem, one that requires a modern approach with the use of various methods. In this paper, the sustainable city transport challenge was addressed in the context of selecting the electric bicycle. Methodically, the paper presents a successful attempt to adapt an MCDA method called COMET to the needs of evaluation of sustainable transport.
The fuzzy set theory with the COMET method was used to investigate and create the decision model under the condition of full knowledge and with some degree of uncertainty, using the interval numbers. As a result of the preformed research, also a practical contribution in the sustainable transport domain was obtained. The presented model for ebikes evaluation based on an extensive set of available options contains important domain knowledge supporting the decision makers in the process of evaluation and selection of proper variant of sustainable transport. Eight criteria were taken into consideration (battery capacity, charging time, number of gears, engine power, maximum speed, range, weight, and price); however, to reduce the amount of pairwise comparison, the final assessment model was restructured into sub-models, significantly reducing the complexity of the problem and restructuring the criteria into groups. Ten alternatives to electric bicycles were examined in details (from an extensive set of bikes presented in
Table 9. The practical implications in the domain of sustainable transport provide a reference model for ebikes. It is worth adding that the proposed approach has considerable practical usability. The freely available software on the
comet.edu.pl website results in the model being easy to validate even for non-experienced users.
For further study, it would be valuable to extend this model with additional criteria and sub-models, creating an even more detailed selection of electric bicycles. Additionally, further works concerning the incomplete knowledge case could be performed.