Abstract
The transition to battery electric vehicles is critical for reducing global carbon emissions, yet high costs and inadequate charging infrastructure continue to limit market penetration. This study designs a cost-benefit mechanism that integrates an Agent-Based Model with evolutionary simulations in small-world networks to assess the effectiveness of government subsidies in promoting battery electric vehicles adoption and charging-station expansion across different policy scenarios. The study evaluates both short- and long-term effectiveness indicators, highlighting trade-offs between market acceleration and cost-benefit efficiency. Surprisingly, the findings reveal that an unlimited short-term budget yields the highest cost-effectiveness. The key results demonstrate that consumer subsidies, especially when concentrated in early stages, significantly enhance battery electric vehicles market share. In contrast, subsidies for charging stations have a more modest effect, a reduction in station subsidies leading to only a 0.87 % drop in battery electric vehicles adoption while reducing consumer subsidies results in an 8.8 % decline. Allocating additional resources to consumer subsidies requires diverting 12.56 %–16.23 % of the budget from charging stations, while reducing station subsidies frees up 15.83 %–16.17 % of the budget for consumer incentives. This study equips policymakers with essential insights to optimize subsidy strategies for maximization of both environmental and economic outcomes.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 144586 |
Journal | Journal of Cleaner Production |
Volume | 486 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 1 Jan 2025 |
Keywords
- Complex network
- cost benefit analysis (CBA)
- Electric vehicle
- Environmental policy
- Evolutionary processes
- Game theory
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
- General Environmental Science
- Strategy and Management
- Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering