Study compares greenhouse gas reductions for light-duty vehicles

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Major automotive manufacturers are ramping up production of electric trucks as a key strategy to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of their vehicles.

Light-duty vehicles, including sedans, SUVs and pickup trucks, are currently responsible for 58 percent of U.S. transportation sector greenhouse gas emissions. Pickup trucks accounted for 14 percent of light-duty vehicle sales in the United States in 2020, and the market share of both pickups and SUVs has grown in recent years.

But what does pickup truck electrification mean for the decarbonization of the transportation industry?

University of Michigan and Ford Motor Co. researchers addressed this question in a new study and evaluated the savings in greenhouse gas emissions relative to gasoline-powered pickup trucks.

The study was published online March 1 in the journal Environmental Research Letters.

Life cycle greenhouse gas emissions for each vehicle class — pickup, SUV and sedan — and powertrain — internal combustion, hybrid and battery electric. Average lifetime emissions account for differences in grid emissions for electricity balancing areas and county-level differences in drive cycle and temperature effect on fuel economy.
Life cycle greenhouse gas emissions for each vehicle class — pickup, SUV and sedan — and powertrain — internal combustion, hybrid and battery electric. Average lifetime emissions account for differences in grid emissions for electricity balancing areas and county-level differences in drive cycle and temperature effect on fuel economy.  

“This is an important study to inform and encourage climate action. Our research clearly shows substantial greenhouse gas emission reductions that can be achieved from transitioning to electrified powertrains across all vehicle classes,” said the study’s senior author Greg Keoleian, the Peter M. Wege Endowed Professor of Sustainable Systems, professor of sustainable systems and director of the Center for Sustainable Systems in the School for Environment and Sustainability.

In the study, researchers conducted a cradle-to-grave assessment of the life cycle of pickup trucks and compared the implications of pickup truck electrification to those of sedan and SUV electrification.

With a focus on evaluating greenhouse gas emissions, researchers looked at three different powertrain options from the 2020 model year — internal-combustion-engine vehicles, hybrid-electric vehicles and battery-electric vehicles — for midsize sedans, midsize SUVs and full-size pickup trucks, accounting for differences in fuel economy, annual mileage, vehicle production and vehicle lifetime across vehicle classes.

They found that for sedans, SUVs and pickup trucks, battery-electric vehicles have approximately 64 percent lower cradle-to-grave life cycle greenhouse gas emissions than internal-combustion-engine vehicles on average across the United States.

“This study can help us to understand the potential impact of electrification from an emissions-reduction perspective, particularly as we introduce new electric vehicles, and how we can continue to accelerate our progress towards carbon neutrality. We’re proud to partner with U-M in this critical work,” said Cynthia Williams, global director of sustainability, homologation and compliance at Ford.

The study offers several key findings. Researchers, for instance, found that replacing an internal-combustion-engine vehicle with a battery-electric vehicle results in greater total tonnage of greenhouse gas emissions reductions as the vehicle size increases, due to the greater fuel consumption of larger vehicles.

The study’s first author, Max Woody, research specialist at the Center for Sustainable Systems, said that although the percentage savings is about the same across vehicle classes, on average:

  • Replacing an internal-combustion-engine sedan with a battery-electric sedan saves 45 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent.
  • Replacing an internal-combustion-engine SUV with a battery-electric SUV saves 56 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent.
  • Replacing an internal-combustion-engine pickup with a battery-electric pickup saves 74 metric tons carbon dioxide equivalent over the lifetime of the vehicles.

The researchers also found that battery-electric vehicles have larger greenhouse gas emissions in their manufacturing than internal-combustion-engine vehicles, due to battery production, but this impact is offset by savings in their operation.

For battery-electric vehicles and internal-combustion-engine vehicles, the break-even time is 1.2 to 1.3 years for sedans, 1.4 to 1.6 years for SUVs and 1.3 years for pickup trucks, based on the average U.S. grid and vehicle miles traveled.

“This study expands upon previous studies that have focused on comparing battery-electric vehicle sedans to their internal-combustion-engine or hybrid counterparts,” Keoleian said. “We report emissions for vehicle production, use and end-of-life stages on a per-mile basis and over the total vehicle lifetime.

“In addition, we analyzed the regional variation in emissions considering differences in electricity grid mixes and ambient temperatures, and we also explored the effects of the rate of grid decarbonization on emission reduction.”

Vehicle emissions vary across the country, as different temperatures and different drive cycles affect a vehicle’s fuel economy.

For electric vehicles, the greenhouse gas emissions intensity of the local electricity grid is also an important factor. The study developed maps to show the lifetime grams of carbon dioxide equivalent per mile for each powertrain — internal-combustion-engine, hybrid and battery-electric vehicles — and vehicle type — sedan, SUV and pickup truck — by county across the United States.

Researchers found that public concerns about battery-electric vehicles having higher emissions than internal-combustion-engine vehicles or hybrids are largely unfounded, as battery-electric vehicles outperform hybrids in 95 percent-96 percent of counties, while battery-electric vehicles outperform internal-combustion-engine vehicles in 98 percent-99 percent of counties, even assuming only modest progress towards grid decarbonization.

Charging strategies can further reduce battery-electric vehicle emissions. The study found that charging during the hours of the day with the lowest grid emissions intensity can reduce emissions by 11 percent on average.

“Deployment of electric vehicles and expansion of renewable energy resources like solar and wind should be done at the same time,” Woody said. “The benefit of each is increased by the development of the other.”

The other authors of the study are Parth Vaishnav of SEAS and CSS, and Robert De Kleine, Hyung Chul Kim, James Anderson and Timothy Wallington of Ford’s Research and Innovation Center.

The study was supported by Ford Motor Co. through a Ford-University of Michigan Alliance Project Award.

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