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A discrete choice experiment on consumer's willingness-to-pay for vehicle automation in the Greater Toronto Area

Transportation

A discrete choice experiment on consumer's willingness-to-pay for vehicle automation in the Greater Toronto Area

K. Wang, M. F. Salehin, et al.

This study explores how different automation levels and ownership types shape willingness-to-pay for autonomous vehicles, revealing strong inertia toward private conventional cars, higher WTP for Level 4 among private buyers and Level 5 preference for car-sharing users. The research was conducted by Kaili Wang, Mohammad Faizus Salehin, and Khandker Nurul Habib.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Autonomous vehicles (AVs) are around the corner, and adopting this technology will create a revolution in our transportation system. Mass adoption of AVs might have both positive and negative impacts to travel demand and the transportation system. How we adopt, matters. Several studies show that private AVs might lead to more travel demand and dispersed urban patterns, but shared AVs might contribute otherwise. This paper presents an overview of and a modelling work on a dataset collected in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) to understand consumers' willingness-to-pay for various automation levels in their vehicles simultaneously with private and shared ownership types. The study used 190 records from a reasonably representative sample collected from the study area. Heteroskedastic error-component mixed multinomial and nested logit models are formatted for different vehicle ownerships in this study. Strong inertia effect of staying with private conventional vehicles (PCVs) is identified. We also discover that private vehicle buyers will find level 4 vehicles attractive, whereas car-sharing service users will favour level 5 vehicles. For level 4 vehicles, consumers are willing to pay from CAN $ 10,800 to CAN $ 29,800, depending on the vehicle price. We also find that respondents' age, family members' health conditions, commuting conditionals, and household incomes will influence their willingness to pay for owning AVs.
Publisher
Transportation Research Part A
Published On
May 10, 2021
Authors
Kaili Wang, Mohammad Faizus Salehin, Khandker Nurul Habib
Tags
Autonomous vehicles
Willingness-to-pay
Automation levels (L4/L5)
Private vs shared ownership
Discrete choice modeling
Travel demand impacts
Greater Toronto Area
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