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Analysing mobility and environmental impacts of automated ride-sharing services under mixed traffic

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posted on 2025-08-04, 14:24 authored by Rajae Haouari, Hua Sha, Mohit Singh, Evita Papazikou, Amna Chaudhry, Pete Thomas, Andrew MorrisAndrew Morris, Mohammed Quddus
Shared Automated Vehicles (SAVs) hold great promise for the future of urban mobility. Automated ride-sharing services are expected to alleviate traffic congestion, reduce traffic emissions, and significantly improve road safety by combining advanced connected and autonomous vehicle (CAV) technology with the ride and/or car-sharing concept. These benefits, however, are highly dependent on the deployment concept of the service and environment including network characteristics, CAV technology, traffic compositions, population acceptance, etc. This study aims to assess the mobility and environmental impacts of introducing a door-to-door automated ride-sharing (ARS) service under different deployment scenarios. Two calibrated and validated city-scale networks with different characteristics were used: a suburban area in the Greater Manchester (UK) and a city-centre area in Leicester (UK). An optimisation technique for the vehicle routing problem was developed to efficiently operate ARS at a network-level. The customers' preference for individual and shared rides with Willingness to Share (WTS) was investigated to gain a better understanding of the performance indicators (i.e., delay, travel time, speed, kilometres-driven and emissions) The introduction of ARS was investigated under two deployment scenarios: 1) mixed with conventional human-driven vehicles (HDVs) and 2) mixed with HDVs with varying CAV market penetration rates. Findings suggest that introducing ARS can adversely impact mobility and the environment under mixed traffic, especially in suburban areas, and the benefits of an automated ride-sharing system are highly dependent on WTS. The findings will assist local authorities in formulating automated ride-sharing policies to manage the traffic on roads.<p></p>

Funding

Societal Level Impacts of Connected and Automated Vehicles

European Commission

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History

School

  • Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
  • Design and Creative Arts

Department

  • Design
  • Aeronautical and Automotive Engineering

Published in

Research in Transportation Business & Management

Volume

62

Article number

101434

Source

102nd Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© The Authors

Publisher statement

This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Acceptance date

2025-06-09

Publication date

2025-06-17

Copyright date

2025

Notes

A version of this paper was presented at the 102nd Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 7th January 2023 - 11th January 2023.

ISSN

2210-5395

Language

  • en

Depositor

Prof Andrew Morris. Deposit date: 23 July 2025

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