Impact of mass-scale deployment of electric vehicles and benefits of smart charging across all European countries

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Andrea Mangipinto (Politecnico di Milano)

Francesco Lombardi (TU Delft - Technology, Policy and Management, Politecnico di Milano)

Francesco Davide Sanvito (Politecnico di Milano)

Matija Pavičević (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, EnergyVille)

Sylvain Quoilin (Université de Liège, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, EnergyVille)

Emanuela Colombo (Politecnico di Milano)

Research Group
Energy and Industry
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2022.118676 Final published version
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Research Group
Energy and Industry
Journal title
Applied Energy
Volume number
312
Article number
118676
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302
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Abstract

The mass-scale integration of electric vehicles into the power system is a key pillar of the European energy transition agenda. Yet, the extent to which such integration would represent a burden for the power system of each member country is still an unanswered question. This is mainly due to a lack of accurate and context-specific representations of aggregate mobility and charging patterns for large electric vehicle fleets. Here, we develop and validate against empirical data an open-source model that simulates such patterns at high (1-min) temporal resolution, based on easy-to-gather, openly accessible data. We hence apply the model – which we name RAMP-mobility – to 28 European countries, showing for the first time the existence of marked differences in mobility and charging patterns across those, due to a combination of weather and socio-economic factors. We hence quantify the impact that fully-electric car fleets would have on the demand to be met by each country's power system: an uncontrolled deployment of electric vehicles would increase peak demand in the range 35–51%, whilst a plausible share of adoption of smart charging strategies could limit the increase to 30–41%. On the contrary, plausible technology (battery density) and infrastructure (charging power) developments would not provide substantial benefits. Efforts for electric vehicles integration should hence primarily focus on mechanisms to support smart vehicle-to-grid interaction. The approach is applicable generally beyond Europe and can provide policy makers with quantitatively reliable insights about electric vehicles impact on the power system.