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Impacts of electrifying public transit on the electricity grid, from regional to state level analysis

•Bottom-up estimation tool to develop electric public transport (EPT) charging loads.•Uses GTFS public data and can be scaled to hundreds of cities/states globally.•EPT could add 17% to critical peak demand on some distribution zone substations. Battery electrified public transit (BEPT), including b...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied energy 2022-02, Vol.307, p.118272, Article 118272
Main Authors: Purnell, K., Bruce, A.G., MacGill, I.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Bottom-up estimation tool to develop electric public transport (EPT) charging loads.•Uses GTFS public data and can be scaled to hundreds of cities/states globally.•EPT could add 17% to critical peak demand on some distribution zone substations. Battery electrified public transit (BEPT), including buses and passenger ferries, is a promising solution to transport-related climate emissions and urban air pollution, but introduces potentially challenging large, coincident demand in the low-voltage distribution network. This paper presents a tool for estimating the energy and charging demand of electrified public transit using public data that is available in over 150 cities/states globally and demonstrates it in two case studies. The tool applies heuristic vehicle scheduling to existing public General Transit Feed Specification data to model the charging profiles and electricity consumption of BEPT for various charging regimes across different geographical scales. For the case study of New South Wales, Australia, the impacts of BEPT are most significant at the low-voltage network, where adding a battery-electric bus depot was found to increase the annual critical peak demand at the local zone substation in Summer by up to 17% while exacerbating demand during the daily evening peak period by 20–30%. Across the entire state of NSW, a full transition to BEPT increases annual electricity consumption by 1.28–1.34% and peak daily demand by 1–3%.
ISSN:0306-2619
1872-9118
DOI:10.1016/j.apenergy.2021.118272