nep-tre New Economics Papers
on Transport Economics
Issue of 2012‒11‒24
five papers chosen by
Erik Teodoor Verhoef
VU University Amsterdam

  1. Airline alliances, antitrust immunity and market foreclosure By Bilotkach, Volodymyr; Hüschelrath, Kai
  2. Optimal Recharging Strategy for Battery-Switch Stations for Electric Vehicles in France By Margaret Armstrong; Charles El Hajj Moussa; Alain Galli; Philippe Rivière; Jérôme Adnot
  3. Subsidies for resident passengers in air transport markets By Jorge Valido; M. Pilar Socorro; Aday Hernández; Ofelia Betancor
  4. Is urban logistics pooling viable? A multistakeholder multicriteria analysis By Jesus Gonzalez-Feliu; Josep-Maria Salanova Grau
  5. The cost structure of the clean development mechanism By Rahman, Shaikh M.; Larson, Donald F.; Dinar, Ariel

  1. By: Bilotkach, Volodymyr; Hüschelrath, Kai
    Abstract: We examine the issue of market foreclosure by airline partnerships with antitrust immunity. Overlapping data on frequency of service and passenger volumes on non-stop transatlantic routes with information on the dynamics of airline partnerships, we find evidence consistent with the airlines operating under antitrust immunity refusing to accept connecting passengers from the outside carriers at respective hub airports. Following the antitrust immunity, airlines outside the partnership reduce their traffic to the partner airlines' hub airports by 4.1-11.5 percent. We suggest regulators should take possible market foreclosure effects into account when assessing the competitive effects of antitrust immunity for airline alliances. --
    Keywords: air transportation,alliances,antitrust immunity,foreclosure
    JEL: L41 L93 K21
    Date: 2012
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:zewdip:10083r&r=tre
  2. By: Margaret Armstrong (CERNA - Centre d'économie industrielle - Mines ParisTech); Charles El Hajj Moussa (CERNA - Centre d'économie industrielle - Mines ParisTech); Alain Galli (CERNA - Centre d'économie industrielle - Mines ParisTech); Philippe Rivière (CEP - Centre Énergétique et Procédés - Mines ParisTech); Jérôme Adnot (CEP - Centre Énergétique et Procédés - Mines ParisTech)
    Abstract: Most papers that study the recharging of electric vehicles focus on charging the batteries at home and at the work-place. The alternative is for owners to exchange the battery at a specially equipped battery switch station (BSS). This paper studies strategies for the BSS to buy and sell the electricity through the day-ahead market. We determine what the optimal strategies would have been for a large fleet of EVs in 2010 and 2011, for the V2G and the G2V cases. These give the amount that the BSS should offer to buy or sell each hour of the day. Given the size of the fleet, the quantities of electricity bought and sold will displace the market equilibrium. Using the aggregate offers to buy and the bids to sell on the day-ahead market, we compute what the new prices and volumes transacted would be. While buying electricity for the G2V case incurs a cost, it is possible to generate revenue in the V2G case, if the arrivals of the EVs are evenly spaced during the day. We compare the total cost of implementing the strategies proposed with the cost of buying the same quantity of electricity from EDF.
    Keywords: day-ahead auction market; vehicle-to-grid; grid-to-vehicle
    Date: 2012–06–27
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hal:wpaper:hal-00750257&r=tre
  3. By: Jorge Valido; M. Pilar Socorro; Aday Hernández; Ofelia Betancor
    Abstract: In this work, we analyse from a theoretical perspective the efficiency of an ad valorem and a lump sum subsidy for resident passengers. In particular, we consider passengers with high and low willingness to pay that may be residents in a given area (and therefore entitled to a subsidy). All passengers are served by a monopoly air carrier that wants to get as much of their willingness to pay as possible. We show that if the proportion of resident passengers is high enough, non-resident passengers may be expelled from the market. Taken into account this undesirable situation we compare ad valorem and lump sum subsidies. We conclude that if the proportion of passengers with high willingness to pay is low (high) enough applying a lump sum (ad valorem) subsidy for resident passengers is better in social terms. We apply these results to a specific case study in the Canary Islands where ad valorem subsidies for resident passengers have been extensively used. We conclude that in most routes the lump sum subsidy is undoubtedly better in social terms.
    Date: 2012–11
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fda:fdaddt:2012-10&r=tre
  4. By: Jesus Gonzalez-Feliu (LET - Laboratoire d'économie des transports - CNRS : UMR5593 - Université Lumière - Lyon II - Ecole Nationale des Travaux Publics de l'Etat); Josep-Maria Salanova Grau (Hellenic Institute or Transport - Center of Research and Technologie Hellas)
    Abstract: Collaborative transportation and logistics pooling are relatively new concepts in research, but are very popular in practice. In the last years, collaborative transportation seems a good city logistics alternative to classical urban consolidation centres, but it is still in a development stage. This paper proposes a framework for urban logistics pooling ex-ante evaluation. This framework is developed with two purposes. The first is to generate comparable contrasted or progressive scenarios representing realistic situations; the second to simulate and assess them to make a "before-after" comparative analysis. In this framework, a demand generation model is combined with a route optimization algorithm to simulate the resulting routes of the proposed individual or collaborative distribution schemes assumed by each scenario. Then, several indicators can be obtained, mainly travelled distances, working times, road occupancy rates and operational monetary costs. To illustrate that framework, several scenarios for the urban area of Lyon (France) are simulated and discussed to illustrate the proposed framework possible applications.
    Keywords: urban logistics; resource sharing; freight transport pooling; collaborative multicriteria analysis
    Date: 2012–10–24
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hal:journl:halshs-00750752&r=tre
  5. By: Rahman, Shaikh M.; Larson, Donald F.; Dinar, Ariel
    Abstract: This paper examines the cost of producing emission reduction credits under the Clean Development Mechanism. Using project-specific data, cost functions are estimated using alternative functional forms. The results show that, in general, the distribution of projects in the pipeline does not correspond exclusively to the cost of generating anticipated credits. Rather, investment choices appear to be influenced by location and project type considerations in a way that is consistent with variable transaction costs and investor preferences among hosts and classes of projects. This implies that comparative advantage based on the marginal cost of abatement is only one of several factors driving Clean Development Mechanism investments. This is significant since much of the conceptual and applied numerical literature concerning greenhouse gas mitigation policies relies on presumptions about relative abatement costs. The authors also find that Clean Development Mechanism projects generally exhibit constant or increasing returns to scale. In contrast, they find variations among classes of projects concerning economies of time.
    Keywords: Climate Change Economics,Climate Change Mitigation and Green House Gases,Energy Production and Transportation,Transport Economics Policy&Planning,Energy and Environment
    Date: 2012–11–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:wbk:wbrwps:6262&r=tre

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