Assessing the influence of policy factors on alternative fuel vehicle adoption in Georgia

To make a compelling case for government incentives as a stimulus for alternative fuel vehicle adoption, this thesis assesses the preliminary impacts associated with the elimination of Georgia’s income tax credits for low-emission and zero-emission vehicle purchases. The thesis identifies policy fac...

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Main Author: Martin, Tyler Allen
Other Authors: Ross, Catherine L.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/55051
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-550512016-06-28T03:34:23ZAssessing the influence of policy factors on alternative fuel vehicle adoption in GeorgiaMartin, Tyler AllenPolicyElectric vehiclesAlternative fuel vehiclesIncentivesVehicle salesGeorgiaTo make a compelling case for government incentives as a stimulus for alternative fuel vehicle adoption, this thesis assesses the preliminary impacts associated with the elimination of Georgia’s income tax credits for low-emission and zero-emission vehicle purchases. The thesis identifies policy factors that appear to impact alternative fuel vehicle (AFV) adoption in the United States, with a focus on government incentives. Specific policy factors are discussed in the context of state and federal laws. For Georgia, motor vehicle registrations were collected to track AFV adoption rates before and after the change in law. Electric and hybrid vehicle registrations in Georgia have plummeted since the income tax credits were eliminated on June 30, 2015. Income tax credit data were collected to chart the significant increase in zero-emission and low-emission vehicle purchases and leases since electric vehicles started flooding the market. The primary outcome of this research is a set of distinct, measurable policy factors that influence AFV adoption in the United States. The factors identified include: 1) reward amount to income ratio, 2) ease of policy comprehension, 3) consumer awareness, 4) fuel/vehicle coverage of incentives, 5) incentive user groups, 6) forms of incentives (grants, income tax credits, etc.), 7) number of incentives available, and 8) dollar values of incentives. The conclusion presents factors for use in choice model estimation. These factors should be useful by policymakers who are trying to understand the true value of government incentives for alternative fuel vehicles.Georgia Institute of TechnologyRoss, Catherine L.Guensler, Randall L.Welch, Timothy F.2016-05-27T13:25:01Z2016-05-27T13:25:01Z2016-052016-04-29May 20162016-05-27T13:25:01ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/55051en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Policy
Electric vehicles
Alternative fuel vehicles
Incentives
Vehicle sales
Georgia
spellingShingle Policy
Electric vehicles
Alternative fuel vehicles
Incentives
Vehicle sales
Georgia
Martin, Tyler Allen
Assessing the influence of policy factors on alternative fuel vehicle adoption in Georgia
description To make a compelling case for government incentives as a stimulus for alternative fuel vehicle adoption, this thesis assesses the preliminary impacts associated with the elimination of Georgia’s income tax credits for low-emission and zero-emission vehicle purchases. The thesis identifies policy factors that appear to impact alternative fuel vehicle (AFV) adoption in the United States, with a focus on government incentives. Specific policy factors are discussed in the context of state and federal laws. For Georgia, motor vehicle registrations were collected to track AFV adoption rates before and after the change in law. Electric and hybrid vehicle registrations in Georgia have plummeted since the income tax credits were eliminated on June 30, 2015. Income tax credit data were collected to chart the significant increase in zero-emission and low-emission vehicle purchases and leases since electric vehicles started flooding the market. The primary outcome of this research is a set of distinct, measurable policy factors that influence AFV adoption in the United States. The factors identified include: 1) reward amount to income ratio, 2) ease of policy comprehension, 3) consumer awareness, 4) fuel/vehicle coverage of incentives, 5) incentive user groups, 6) forms of incentives (grants, income tax credits, etc.), 7) number of incentives available, and 8) dollar values of incentives. The conclusion presents factors for use in choice model estimation. These factors should be useful by policymakers who are trying to understand the true value of government incentives for alternative fuel vehicles.
author2 Ross, Catherine L.
author_facet Ross, Catherine L.
Martin, Tyler Allen
author Martin, Tyler Allen
author_sort Martin, Tyler Allen
title Assessing the influence of policy factors on alternative fuel vehicle adoption in Georgia
title_short Assessing the influence of policy factors on alternative fuel vehicle adoption in Georgia
title_full Assessing the influence of policy factors on alternative fuel vehicle adoption in Georgia
title_fullStr Assessing the influence of policy factors on alternative fuel vehicle adoption in Georgia
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the influence of policy factors on alternative fuel vehicle adoption in Georgia
title_sort assessing the influence of policy factors on alternative fuel vehicle adoption in georgia
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/55051
work_keys_str_mv AT martintylerallen assessingtheinfluenceofpolicyfactorsonalternativefuelvehicleadoptioningeorgia
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