Evaluating the Sustainability of Electric Buses During Operation via Field Data
Journal article, 2025

Environmental sustainability is a crucial issue for all human beings, and vehicle emissions significantly contribute to climate change. This has prompted many countries, including China, Norway, and Germany, to focus on electrifying transportation. This study quantifies the life cycle carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions of electric buses (EBs) in Guangzhou, China, via a life cycle analysis methodology, revealing an average life cycle emission of 1,097.07 g CO2·km−1·vehicle−1. The operation and charging stage contributes the most to the lifespan of CO2 emissions at 69.6%, driven by carbon-intensive power grid. Compared with conventional internal combustion engine buses, EBs result in significant emission reductions, but regional grid carbon intensity variations across China mean that their benefits depend on nationwide green energy adoption. By 2030, emissions are projected to decline by 15.28%, aligning with carbon peak goals. The findings emphasize that transitioning to renewable energy grids and hybrid technologies is critical for sustainable transportation.

life cycle analysis (LCA)

GHG emissions

EBs

electrification of transportation

Author

Baozhen Yao

Dalian University of Technology

Zhihao Qi

Dalian University of Technology

Ziqi Liu

Minke Zhu

Shaohua Cui

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Geology and Geotechnics

Radu Emil Precup

Academia Romana

Raul Cristian Roman

West University of Timisoara

Journal of Intelligent and Connected Vehicles

23999802 (eISSN)

Vol. 8 3 9210061

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Energy Engineering

Energy Systems

Climate Science

DOI

10.26599/JICV.2025.9210061

More information

Latest update

11/3/2025