Should electric vehicle purchase subsidies be linked with scrappage requirements?

Author:

Ankney Kevin1,Leard Benjamin2

Affiliation:

1. Georgetown University Washington District of Columbia USA

2. University of Tennessee The Baker School of Public Policy and Public Affairs and the Department of Economics Knoxville Tennessee USA

Abstract

AbstractWe build a vehicle purchase and disposal model to analyze a policy that links a new electric vehicle (EV) purchase subsidy with a used gasoline vehicle scrappage requirement. We evaluate the policy based on changes in sales, scrappage, subsidy dollars spent, and emissions reductions. We find that linking a purchase subsidy with a scrappage requirement is expected to result in fewer new EV sales and carbon dioxide emissions reductions relative to a policy without linking. Our modeling reveals that these effects are due to trade‐in vehicle eligibility requirements and opportunity costs lowering additional participation in the linked policy. However, the linked policy significantly increases used vehicle scrappage and is more progressive than the unlinked policy. We find that emissions reductions due to additional scrappage are sensitive to how remaining miles of scrapped vehicles are replaced.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference36 articles.

1. Ankney K.(2022).Essays on environmental economics and transportation.https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/bitstream/handle/10822/1064600/Ankney_georgetown_0076D_15203.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

2. Ankney K. &Leard B.(2023).How much do consumers value fuel cost savings? Evidence from passenger vehicle leasing[Working paper].Resources for the Future.https://www.rff.org/publications/working‐papers/how‐much‐do‐consumers‐value‐fuel‐cost‐savings‐evidence‐from‐the‐passenger‐vehicle‐leasing‐market/

3. Designing efficient markets for carbon offsets with distributional constraints

4. A credible approach for measuring inframarginal participation in energy efficiency programs

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