Chengcheng Zhao, Leiliang Zheng Kobayashi, Awad Bin Saud Alquaity, Jean-Christophe Monfort, Emre Cenker, Noliner Miralles, S. Mani Sarathy
{"title":"城市公交脱碳解决方案:沙特阿拉伯生命周期案例研究","authors":"Chengcheng Zhao, Leiliang Zheng Kobayashi, Awad Bin Saud Alquaity, Jean-Christophe Monfort, Emre Cenker, Noliner Miralles, S. Mani Sarathy","doi":"10.1038/s44172-024-00238-9","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"With heavy reliance on fossil fuels, countries like Saudi Arabia face challenges in reducing carbon emissions from urban bus transportation. Herein, we address the gaps in evaluating proton-exchange membrane fuel cell buses and develop a globally relevant life-cycle assessment model using Saudi Arabia as a case study. We consider various bus propulsion technologies, including fuel cell buses powered by grey and blue hydrogen, battery electric buses, and diesel engines, and include the shipping phase, air conditioning load, and refuelling infrastructure. The assessment illustrates fuel cell buses using blue hydrogen can reduce emissions by 53.6% compared to diesel buses, despite a 19.5% increase in energy use from carbon capture and storage systems. Battery electric buses are affected by the energy mix and battery manufacturing, so only cut emissions by 16.9%. Sensitivity analysis shows climate benefits depend on energy sources and efficiencies of carbon capture and hydrogen production. By 2030, grey and blue hydrogen-powered fuel cell buses and battery electric buses are projected to reduce carbon emissions by 19.3%, 33.4%, and 51% respectively, compared to their 2022 levels. Fully renewable-powered battery electric buses potentially achieve up to 89.6% reduction. However, fuel cell buses consistently exhibit lower environmental burdens compared to battery electric buses. Chengcheng Zhao and co-authors study the potential of battery electric buses and hydrogen polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell buses. They analyse their usage in urban transport and quantify the environmental impact.","PeriodicalId":72644,"journal":{"name":"Communications engineering","volume":" ","pages":"1-18"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.nature.com/articles/s44172-024-00238-9.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Solutions for decarbonising urban bus transport: a life cycle case study in Saudi Arabia\",\"authors\":\"Chengcheng Zhao, Leiliang Zheng Kobayashi, Awad Bin Saud Alquaity, Jean-Christophe Monfort, Emre Cenker, Noliner Miralles, S. Mani Sarathy\",\"doi\":\"10.1038/s44172-024-00238-9\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"With heavy reliance on fossil fuels, countries like Saudi Arabia face challenges in reducing carbon emissions from urban bus transportation. Herein, we address the gaps in evaluating proton-exchange membrane fuel cell buses and develop a globally relevant life-cycle assessment model using Saudi Arabia as a case study. We consider various bus propulsion technologies, including fuel cell buses powered by grey and blue hydrogen, battery electric buses, and diesel engines, and include the shipping phase, air conditioning load, and refuelling infrastructure. The assessment illustrates fuel cell buses using blue hydrogen can reduce emissions by 53.6% compared to diesel buses, despite a 19.5% increase in energy use from carbon capture and storage systems. Battery electric buses are affected by the energy mix and battery manufacturing, so only cut emissions by 16.9%. Sensitivity analysis shows climate benefits depend on energy sources and efficiencies of carbon capture and hydrogen production. By 2030, grey and blue hydrogen-powered fuel cell buses and battery electric buses are projected to reduce carbon emissions by 19.3%, 33.4%, and 51% respectively, compared to their 2022 levels. Fully renewable-powered battery electric buses potentially achieve up to 89.6% reduction. However, fuel cell buses consistently exhibit lower environmental burdens compared to battery electric buses. Chengcheng Zhao and co-authors study the potential of battery electric buses and hydrogen polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell buses. 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Solutions for decarbonising urban bus transport: a life cycle case study in Saudi Arabia
With heavy reliance on fossil fuels, countries like Saudi Arabia face challenges in reducing carbon emissions from urban bus transportation. Herein, we address the gaps in evaluating proton-exchange membrane fuel cell buses and develop a globally relevant life-cycle assessment model using Saudi Arabia as a case study. We consider various bus propulsion technologies, including fuel cell buses powered by grey and blue hydrogen, battery electric buses, and diesel engines, and include the shipping phase, air conditioning load, and refuelling infrastructure. The assessment illustrates fuel cell buses using blue hydrogen can reduce emissions by 53.6% compared to diesel buses, despite a 19.5% increase in energy use from carbon capture and storage systems. Battery electric buses are affected by the energy mix and battery manufacturing, so only cut emissions by 16.9%. Sensitivity analysis shows climate benefits depend on energy sources and efficiencies of carbon capture and hydrogen production. By 2030, grey and blue hydrogen-powered fuel cell buses and battery electric buses are projected to reduce carbon emissions by 19.3%, 33.4%, and 51% respectively, compared to their 2022 levels. Fully renewable-powered battery electric buses potentially achieve up to 89.6% reduction. However, fuel cell buses consistently exhibit lower environmental burdens compared to battery electric buses. Chengcheng Zhao and co-authors study the potential of battery electric buses and hydrogen polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell buses. They analyse their usage in urban transport and quantify the environmental impact.