Multiagent Spatial Simulation of Autonomous Taxis for Urban Commute: Travel Economics and Environmental Impacts
Authored by Ming Xu, Shu-Chien Hsu, Miaojia Lu, Morteza Taiebat
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1061/(asce)up.1943-5444.0000469
Sponsors:
Research Grants Council of Hong Kong
Platforms:
GAMA
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
With the likelihood of autonomous vehicle technologies in public
transport and taxi systems increasing, their impact on commuting in
real-world road networks is insufficiently studied. In this study, an
agent-based model is developed to simulate how commuters travel by
autonomous taxis (aTaxis) in real-world road networks. The model
evaluates the travel costs and environmental implications of
substituting conventional personal vehicle travel with aTaxi travel. The
proposed model is applied to the city of Ann Arbor, Michigan, to
demonstrate the effectiveness of aTaxis. The results indicate that to
meet daily commute demand with wait times less than 3 min, the optimized
autonomous taxi fleet size is only 20\% of the conventional
solo-commuting personal car fleet. Commuting cost decreases by 38\%, and
daily vehicle utilization increases from 14 to 92 min When using
internal combustion engine aTaxis, energy consumption, greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions, and SO2 emissions are respectively 16, 25, and 10\%
higher than conventional solo commuting, mainly because of unoccupied
repositioning between trips. Given the emission intensity of the local
electricity grid, the environmental impacts of electric aTaxis do not
show significant improvement over conventional vehicles. (C) 2018
American Society of Civil Engineers.
Tags
Adoption
electric vehicles
multiagent simulation
transportation
Autonomous vehicle
Shortest-path
Commute travel
Environmental
impact
Last-mile