Environmental Evaluation of the New Forms of Mobility: Electric, Shared, Autonomous
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Sustainable Transportation".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (8 February 2021) | Viewed by 29690
Special Issue Editor
Interests: travel behavior; intelligent transport systems; smart and sustainable mobility
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
We are calling for papers for a Special Issue of the journal Sustainability on research to shed light into the environmental impacts of the so-called new forms of mobility.
Shared mobility, especially electric and, in the future, autonomous is a very hot topic today in transport research and practice and is one of the solutions suggested by the European Commission to make mobility more sustainable. However, the sustainability of this emerging trend in the transport sector is more of a hypothesis than a proven reality. Indeed, sharing mobility is continuously challenged by the dynamic forces of the context in which it operates:
- complexity of predicting customer demand;
- consumerization of digital technologies;
- economic and environmental constraints;
so that those providing shared services need to adapt their business models to meet customer expectations in a more efficient, convenient, and sustainable manner.
The sustainability orientation of sharing economy platforms represents an early phase of the development of the platform. Then, the development from early ideas of sharing and accessing to transactions and professionalization is a transition on the platform level in which platforms potentially become increasingly focused on issues other than sustainability as they develop and attract other users and producers.
The reason is that the business models of shared mobility need to have large markets to expand the business and make it profitable, but the more users there are, the less sustainable the transport system is.
Thus, the research needs to evaluate: (a) to which extent this form of mobility that is taking more and more place in our cities is or is not sustainable; (b) what the real impacts on transport demand and modal share are; (c) what the effect is on mobility habits and if and how the relationship with the car is changed and how this mobility relates with public transport. Indeed, the role of shared mobility in the market competition among transport modes is a key issue, because it can strongly influence the modal share and, consequently, the sustainability of mobility. Contributions focusing on all these issues to shed light into the relations among modes and the consequent environmental impact are welcome.
Special attention should also be given to the evolution of the car fleet used on shared mobility, to electric and, ultimately, to autonomous. Proposed papers for this Special Issue may analyze how impacts of shared mobility can change or not if migrating to a different car fleet and how this would impact on the environment, concerning the entire life cycle of the transport system. Papers should concern whether and how the adoption of electric and autonomous vehicles could impact air quality and which effect it could have on climate change (expected impact on global GHG emissions).
Prof. Dr. Cristina Pronello
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- Shared mobility
- Electric mobility
- Autonomous vehicles
- Environmental impacts
- Sustainable mobility
- Air pollution reduction
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