Variability of daily car usage and the frequency of long-distance driving
Journal article, 2021

The limited electric range of battery electric vehicles (BEV) and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV) requires an understanding of the variation in day-to-day driving and the frequency of long-distance driving. Existing literature suggests high regularity of human mobility. However, large longitudinal mobility samples for empirical tests are hardly available. Here, we analyze the regularity of daily vehicle kilometers travelled (VKT) of 10,000 vehicles observed between two months and several years and quantify the regularity of daily VKT and the frequency of long-distance driving. Our results indicate limited regularity of daily VKT beyond one day of time lag (mean autocorrelation ≤ 0.11). Long-distance driving with daily km over 100 km (200 km) typically take place on less than 20% (5% for 200 km) of driving days but make up 40% (18%) of annual VKT. Our results have implications for sustainable transport research and the design of travel surveys.

Regularity of driving

Long-distance driving

Electric vehicle

Daily driving distance

Author

Patrick Plötz

Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research ISI

Frances Sprei

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment

1361-9209 (ISSN)

Vol. 101 103126

Parking norms and mobility services for sustainable mobility

Formas (2017-01029), 2018-01-01 -- 2020-12-31.

Subject Categories

Transport Systems and Logistics

Infrastructure Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.trd.2021.103126

More information

Latest update

12/7/2021