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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. carbon fuel vehicles will be needed to continue to decarbonize LDVs and reduce oil use out to 2050 and beyond.
The IEA and ITF have developed a range of projections of possible “business-as-usual” scenarios around this, indicating the potential for a doubling (or more) of vehicle kilometers travelled (VKT) combined with modest improvements in vehicle fueleconomy. Fuel taxes. litres per 100 km). Vehicle taxes and incentives.
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.
positive results from targeted incentives based on fueleconomy, even if these were. imperfectly aligned with fuel consumption or pollutant emissions. improved car fleet fueleconomy, while working toward a global reduction of emissions from. standards and Euro-1 cars produced from 1992 to 1996. The US scheme saw.
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.
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.
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