An Internet-Based Stated Choices Household Survey for Alternative Fuelled Vehicles
Authors
Dimitris Potoglou
Centre for Spatial Analysis, School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University
Pavlos Savvas Kanaroglou
Centre for Spatial Analysis, School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University
Keywords:
Road
Abstract
The development of alternative fuelled vehicle technology is a key strategy towards environmental sustainability and improved air quality in cities. Analysis of the role of vehicle technology in fulfilling sustainability targets requires estimates of future vehicle demand. The inability to observe actual car-type preferences for cleaner vehicles has led researchers to the development of stated choice methods. This paper reports on the design and descriptive analysis of a stated choices survey on the demand for alternative fuelled vehicles in the Census Metropolitan Area of Hamilton, conducted through the Internet. Respondents were asked to select the vehicle they would most likely buy out of a set of conventional, hybrid and alternative-fuel options over a time horizon of five years. Characteristics such as vehicle purchase price, fuel and maintenance cost, acceleration, alternative fuel incentives, fuel availability and pollution levels were used to describe each vehicle presented. To our knowledge, this is the first study of its kind that focuses at the urban level and the Canadian context and also, it is the first to demonstrate the time- and cost-efficiency of the Internet in designing and collecting Stated Choices data for automobile demand.
Author Biographies
Dimitris Potoglou, Centre for Spatial Analysis, School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University
Researcher
Delft University of Technology
OTB Research Institute for Housing, Urban and Mobility Studies
Dept. of Transport and Infrastructure
Pavlos Savvas Kanaroglou, Centre for Spatial Analysis, School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University
Professor, Canada Research Chair in Spatial Analysis
Centre for Spatial Analysis
School of Geography and Earth Sciences
McMaster University
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada