Exploring the Combined Effect of Factors Influencing Commuting Patterns and CO2 Emissions in Aberdeen Using an Agent-Based Model
Authored by J Gary Polhill, Jiaqi Ge
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.3078
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
This paper develops an agent-based model of the daily commute in
Aberdeen City and the surrounding area in Scotland, UK. We study the
impact of flexitime work arrangements, urban concentration, a new
bypass, and cycle lanes on commute time length, reliability and CO2
emissions, and analyse the diverse conflation of these factors and the
different connections of them in order to detect their cumulative
effects. Our results suggest that flexitime will reduce CO2 emissions
from traffic. It also reduces mean commute time and makes commute time
more reliable. We find that although higher urban concentration will
make travel time less reliable, it will reduce CO2 emissions from
commuting and cut commute time length. There might also be a trade-off
between travel time length and reliability regarding urban
concentration. We show that the new bypass will only reduce mean commute
time by a small amount, while slightly increasing total CO2 emissions.
Finally, we find that cyclists sharing roads with cars do not
necessarily slow down the traffic on the whole. We conclude that
infrastructural, social and urban issues should never be studied in
isolation with each other, and that urban policies will have
ramifications for both urban and surrounding ex-urban areas.
Tags
information
Protocol
Consumption
Travel-time variability
Cellular-automata models
Route choice
behavior
Traffic-flow