Distributional effects from policies for reduced CO2-emissions from car use in 2030
Journal article, 2021

We analyze the distributional effects, from car use and car choice adaptation to three car-related policy instruments intended to reduce CO2 emissions in Sweden to 2030: fossil-fuel taxes, a bonus-malus system for new cars, and mandated biofuel blending. The results show that even with a fast introduction of plug-in electric vehicles, many fossil cars remain, which has important distributional consequences. The fuel tax and the bonus-malus scenarios impose further burdens compared to the reference scenario. The fraction of each population group incurring substantial welfare losses is higher the lower the income. In 2030, the highest-income group can avoid some adaptation costs by their car choice. In all scenarios rural areas bear the largest burden, smaller urban areas the second largest burden, and the largest urban areas the smallest burden. Thus, individuals with high incomes and inhabitants in urban areas appear to have more opportunities to adapt and avoid welfare losses.

Fuel tax

Feebate

Bonus

Car choice

Distributional effects

Equity

Mandated biofuel blend

Malus

Author

Roger Pyddoke

The Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute (VTI)

Jan Erik Swärdh

The Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute (VTI)

Staffan Algers

TPmod AB

Shiva Habibi

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Noor Sedehi Zadeh

The Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute (VTI)

Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment

1361-9209 (ISSN)

Vol. 101 103077

Subject Categories

Renewable Bioenergy Research

Economics

Energy Systems

DOI

10.1016/j.trd.2021.103077

More information

Latest update

11/9/2021