Sustainable transport

Transport is Australia's second-largest carbon emissions source. Significant changes are necessary to meet greenhouse gas targets. Research focuses on sustainable transport policies, electric vehicles, and synthetic fuels to enhance efficiency and reduce emissions, aiming for a carbon-neutral future in the transport sector.

About

Transport is the second largest source of carbon emissions in Australia after electricity production. The transport sector will need to change significantly for Australian and international greenhouse emission targets to be achieved.

Sustainable transport policy

Research within the Crawford School of Public Policy involves examining the policy settings required to achieve a sustainable transport sector. A particular focus is given to policies to encourage the adoption of efficient and low-carbon transport technologies. Ongoing research includes identifying factors that affect the fuel efficiency of aircraft fleets. Work is also being done on the effects of fuel prices on road transport outcomes such as vehicle choices, fuel use, emissions, traffic congestion, and road safety. This research is international in scope.

Renewable energy for transport

The 100% Renewable Energy group in the Research School of Engineering researches the deployment and integration of renewable energy working towards carbon-neutrality throughout Australia’s economy.  Electricity will be the easiest sector to reduce emissions through use of renewable power.  As electricity emissions approach zero, electricity is likely to be the primary enabler for reduced transport emissions through electrification of transport. 

Electric vehicles

The coming shift to light electric vehicles will dramatically change the energy landscape.  While much more energy efficient, electric vehicles will increase electricity consumption.  The location and timing of electric vehicle charging could lead to increased stress on the transmission and distribution systems. 

Synthetic fuels

Liquid fuels have high energy density compared to batteries.  Air travel and heavy transport (ships, long haul trucks) will therefore be difficult to electrify directly.  Synthetic fuels can be produced from electricity through reactions driven from hydrogen and the capture of carbon dioxide enabling conversion of renewable electricity to transport fuels.

News

Australia’s top economists overwhelmingly back government measures to speed the transition to electric cars in order to meet emission reduction targets.

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In 2007 Malcolm Turnbull turned off an industry’s life support without blinking. The industry made light bulbs, of the traditional kind; so energy-inefficient they lost most of it as heat.

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Governments and car manufacturers are investing hundreds of billions of dollars on electric vehicles. But while the electric transport revolution is inevitable, the final destination remains unknown.

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