This study compares the environmental impacts of three urban transport scenarios: private gasoline vehicles, gasoline-powered shared autonomous vehicles (SAVs), and electric SAVs. Using deterministic modelling, Monte Carlo simulation (5000 iterations), analysis of variance, and t-tests, the authors quantify per-capita carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions under varying occupancy, fuel consumption, and grid carbon intensity. Private gasoline cars with low occupancy (1.2 persons/vehicle) produce ≈15 000 g carbon dioxide per 100 km. Gasoline SAVs reduce emissions by ≈66% due to higher occupancy (2.5 persons) and better fuel efficiency. Electric SAVs achieve as low as 640 g carbon dioxide per 100 km, a 96% reduction against private gasoline vehicles, including indirect grid emissions (200 g CO2/kWh). Sensitivity analysis shows gasoline SAVs depend on fuel use and occupancy, while electric SAVs depend primarily on grid carbon intensity. Limitations include fixed occupancy assumptions, idealised routeing, empty-vehicle miles exclusion, and missing upstream emissions for gasoline vehicles. Full life-cycle assessment is absent. Nevertheless, combining shared mobility with electrification offers maximum urban transport decarbonisation, providing actionable insights for policymakers.
Article navigation
Research Article|
July 20 2026
Comparative urban environmental impacts: private gasoline cars, SAVs, and electric SAVs
Mohammad Amin Ebrahimzadeh
;
Mohammad Amin Ebrahimzadeh
Department of Civil Engineering, Science and Research Branch,
Islamic Azad University
, Tehran, Iran
Search for other works by this author on:
Arshia Attar
;
Arshia Attar
Department of Industrial Engineering, Faculty of Engineering,
Islamic Azad University
, Karaj, Iran
Search for other works by this author on:
Ali Abdi Kordani
;
Department of Transportation Planning, Faculty of Engineering,
Imam Khomeini International University
, Qazvin, Iran
Corresponding author Ali Abdi Kordani (aliabdi@eng.ikiu.ac.ir)
Search for other works by this author on:
Soheil Rezashoar
;
Soheil Rezashoar
Department of Transportation Planning, Faculty of Engineering,
Imam Khomeini International University
, Qazvin, Iran
Search for other works by this author on:
Saba Khodabandelouyan
Saba Khodabandelouyan
Department of Industrial Engineering, Faculty of Engineering,
Islamic Azad University
, Karaj, Iran
Search for other works by this author on:
Corresponding author Ali Abdi Kordani (aliabdi@eng.ikiu.ac.ir)
Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests, financial or non-financial, that could influence the outcomes or interpretation of this study.
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
September 04 2025
Accepted:
June 09 2026
Online ISSN: 1751-7680
Print ISSN: 1478-4629
Funding
Funding Group:
- Funding Statement(s): The authors declare that no funds, grants, or other support were received during the preparation of this study.
© 2026 Emerald Publishing Limited
2026
Emerald Publishing Limited
Licensed re-use rights only
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering Sustainability 1–12.
Article history
Received:
September 04 2025
Accepted:
June 09 2026
Citation
Ebrahimzadeh MA, Attar A, Kordani AA, Rezashoar S, Khodabandelouyan S (2026;), "Comparative urban environmental impacts: private gasoline cars, SAVs, and electric SAVs". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering Sustainability, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1680/jensu.25.00195
Download citation file:
0
Views
New and popular articles
Suggested Reading
Assessing the ecological impact of a university: The ecological footprint for the University of Redlands
International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education (June,2001)
A framework for implementing ISO 14000 in construction
Environmental Management and Health (May,2000)
Challenges and opportunities in early-stage life-cycle assessment of railway projects
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Transport (April,2026)
Briefing: Lessons to learn from Welsh roads policy
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Civil Engineering (March,2025)
Shopping behaviour during the early vaccination phase of the COVID-19 pandemic
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Urban Design and Planning (March,2023)
Related Chapters
General Introduction
Urban Alchemy: A Governance and Planning Framework for Sustainable Urban Transformation in Developing Economies
The Dual Faces of Active Tourism: Leisure Enhancement and Environmental Dilemmas
Thwarting Green Growth: Perspectives on Barriers to Pro-environmental Behaviors
Green Entrepreneurship in Tourism: A Decade of Research and Emerging Trends
Greener Future: Building Sustainable Tourism Communities
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
