Near and long‑term perspectives on strategies to decarbonize China’s heavy‑duty trucks through 2050

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date Published

10/2021

Authors

DOI

Abstract

China needs to drastically reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from heavy-duty trucks (HDTs), a
key emitter in the growing transport sector, in order to address energy security concerns and meet
its climate targets. We address existing research gaps by modeling feasibility, applicability, and
energy and emissions impacts of multiple decarbonization strategies at different points in time. China
still relies heavily on coal power, so impacts of new HDT technologies depend on the timing of their
introduction relative to progress toward non-fossil power. We use a bottom-up model to simulate HDT
energy consumption and CO2 emissions through 2050. Results show that beginning to deploy battery
electric and fuel-cell HDTs as early as 2020 and 2035, respectively, could achieve significant and the
largest CO2 emissions reduction by 2050 with a decarbonized power sector. However, viable near-term
strategies—improving efficiency and logistics, switching to liquefied natural gas—could halve HDTs’
current diesel consumption and CO2 emissions by 2050. Our results underscore the need for a mix of
near- and long-term policy and technology options to decarbonize China’s HDTs.

Journal

Nature Scientific Reports

Volume

11

Year of Publication

2021

URL

Organization

Research Areas

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