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The International Energy Agency (IEA) has estimated that fuel consumption and emissions of CO 2 from the world’s cars will roughly double between 2000 and 2050. Worldwide, cars currently account for close to half of the transport sector’s fuel consumption and CO 2 emissions. litres per 100 km).
Vehicle fueleconomy improvements have slowed globally, according to the latest report from the Global FuelEconomy Initiative (GFEI): FuelEconomy In Major Car Markets: Technology And Policy Drivers 2005-2017. Overall, global fueleconomy has improved by an average of 1.7% L ge /100 km.
Meanwhile, significant gains in vehicle fueleconomy over the coming decades are possible and very much needed globally in order to address pressing issues of climate change, energy security and sustainable mobility. The global vehicle fleet is predicted to double by 2050 with 80% of that growth in the developing world.
Cost-effectiveness of the fleet renewal schemes analysed from the perspective of CO 2 and. Car fleet renewal schemes introduced in the US, France and Germany to stimulate consumer spending on cars in the wake of the 2008. million transactions in which old cars were traded for new vehicles under these car fleet renewal schemes.
A partnership of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), the International Energy Agency (IEA), the International Transport Forum (ITF) and FIAFoundation is launching the Global FuelEconomy Initiative (GFEI) at the upcoming Geneva motor show. The global vehicle parc is predicted to triple by 2050.
Vehicle size, a key determinant of fueleconomy, has shown a reduction in OECD countries, while the non-OECD trend is toward bigger vehicles. The analysis, an update of an earlier work using data from 2010 and 2011, found that the global average for light-duty vehicle fueleconomy was 7.2 Source: GFEI. Click to enlarge.
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