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Find out more about how Energy Systems Catapult can help you and your teams
The Consumers, Vehicles and Energy Integration (CVEI) project was launched in 2016 to deliver unique and detailed insight on mainstream consumer behaviour when using and charging battery and hybrid electric vehicles, to understand the changes that will be required of existing infrastructure with the growth in low carbon transport.
An innovative and ambitious project commissioned and funded by the Energy Technologies Institute (ETI) and delivered by a cross-industry consortium led by TRL.
Energy Systems Catapult provided technical expertise and assurance to the project and will take forward the data and models to provide future development of the CVEI capability from the ETI legacy.
There are many challenges and opportunities involved in transitioning to secure and sustainable low-carbon vehicles. Significant benefits include improved air quality, decarbonisation, and potential economic growth. Yet there are barriers to overcome, in regards to consumer uptake and behaviour, integration of vehicles with the energy supply system, energy market structures and UK and European government policy.
Challenges include:
The CVEI project examined the barriers and motivators which influence consumers by providing them with back-to-back experience of using Battery Electric Vehicles or Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles and an equivalent conventional petrol engine car.
The opportunity was to understand the required changes to existing infrastructure, as well as consumer response to a wider introduction of plug-in hybrid and electric vehicles in the UK.
The three year CVEI project aimed to deliver unique and detailed insight on mainstream consumer behaviour when using and charging battery and hybrid electric vehicles, to understand the changes that will be required of existing infrastructure with the growth in low carbon transport.
Delivered by a cross-industry consortium led by TRL, with Energy Systems Catapult providing quality assurance through our Transport asset on behalf of the ETI.
TRL are supported by Element Energy, Baringa Partners and Cenex. Other team members include EDF Energy, Route Monkey, EV Connect, Shell and The Behavioural Insights Team.
The project was carried out in two stages. The first stage focussed on detailed analysis and design of market, policy and regulatory frameworks, business models and customer offerings, electricity and liquid fuel infrastructure and technologies throughout the energy system as well as at charging and refuelling points and on-vehicle. This was supported by insights from consumers and fleets into use of plug-in vehicles.
The second stage, commenced in the autumn of 2016, delivered a trial involving approximately 250 mass-market users to validate the impact of solutions identified in stage one and understand consumer and fleet responses to the vehicles and to managed charging schemes.
The CVEI study gathered in-depth data from vehicles and charge points for 584,000 miles of journeys and 15,700 charge events, covering both home and public locations, while consumer surveys were undertaken to understand attitudes, perceptions and choices.
Smart Charging – A UK Transition to Low Carbon Vehicles
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To put the UK on track towards Net Zero carbon emissions, low emission vehicles need to become mainstream and the CVEI study has produced the most comprehensive picture so far of the issues facing the transition to an electric powered era of vehicular transport in terms of consumer choice.
Whole system approaches to integration of transport in future energy systems, focusing on technical innovations, consumer perspectives, market and policy frameworks, and new generation technologies.
Find out moreFind out more about how Energy Systems Catapult can help you and your teams
Find out more about how Energy Systems Catapult can help you and your teams