Conventional cabin heating in electric buses – the scale of pollution

Joel Anttila*, Rasmus Pettinen, Yancho Todorov

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle in a proceedings journalScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Electric buses are generally considered as zero-emission vehicles and have thus become common in city transport to reduce pollution. However, electric buses in cold regions often utilise diesel-powered auxiliary heaters for cabin thermal management, which contradicts the zero-emission status. Studies have shown auxiliary heaters can emit significant amounts of gaseous and particulate emissions, although the extend of this issue has not been investigated. This paper introduces a method for estimating the annual emissions stemming from electric bus auxiliary heater use. The emission estimate was derived by combining empirical emission data with bus operation schedules and historical weather data. The findings reveal that a fleet of 1 254 electric buses with auxiliary heaters could annually emit up to 5.3 million kilograms of tailpipe CO2 along with notable quantities of local pollutants. Nevertheless, greenhouse gas emissions from the auxiliary heaters were found to be relatively low compared to diesel engines, with CO2 emissions per unit of work used being approximately 10% to 30% of those produced by Euro VI buses. The local pollutants (CO, NOx and particulates) from auxiliary heaters can be significantly higher. For instance, auxiliary heater CO emissions per unit of work were found to be 1 to 19 times higher than those of diesel engines.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)75-82
Number of pages8
JournalIET Conference Proceedings
Volume2024
Issue number15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024
MoE publication typeA4 Article in a conference publication
Event8th E-Mobility Power System Integration Symposium, EMOB 2024 - Helsinki, Finland
Duration: 7 Oct 20248 Oct 2024
https://mobilityintegrationsymposium.org/proceedings/

Funding

The authors would like to acknowledge the support from Horizon Europe research and innovation programme of eBRT2030 project under grant agreement No 101095882 and Helsinki Open Charging System (HOCS) project. eBRT2030 is a flagship European Union funded Horizon Europe project supporting sustainable urban transport. The HOCS project is co-funded by the ELENA Facility, managed by EIB and financed by the European Commission through the Horizon 2020 Programme.

Keywords

  • LOCAL EMISSIONS
  • ELECTRIC BUSES
  • POLLUTION
  • GLOBAL EMISSIONS
  • AUXILIARY HEATER

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