Charging after Lockdown: The Aftermath of COVID-19 Policies on Electric Vehicle Charging Behaviour in The Netherlands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Literature
2. Methods
2.1. Data
2.2. Timeframes
2.3. Approach
3. Results
3.1. COVID-19 Impact Analysis
3.2. Fuel Comparison (2020–2021)
3.3. User Group Comparison
- Office Comparison (2020–2022)
- Growth/Adoption effect: The charging points used in the analysis (online since January 2020) were shared by more distinct users than pre-COVID, after June 2021. The occupancy rates on these charging points have now doubled compared to pre-COVID. The kWh increase that surpasses pre-COVID is therefore partially attributable to the adoption/growth effect, despite measuring the same charging points.
- Representability: The charging points used in the analysis (online since January 2020) were mostly still online in October 2022. There is no significant loss of charging points, which makes them comparable over the years. Despite the fact that new installations have doubled the number of charging points available, 70% of the current (Oct−22) user base is using the charging points that have been installed since January 2020.
- Shared vehicles and Taxi drivers (2020 only)
3.4. Curfew Analysis (2021)
- Outside of curfews, the percentage of sessions that start between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. is between 5.3% (before curfew measurement) and 5.9% (after curfew measurement). During both curfews, this percentage increased to 7.8% (during the 9 p.m. curfew) and 7.4% (during the 10 p.m. curfew). This means that charging that started between 7 p.m.–8 p.m. increased by almost 50% during both phases of the curfew (compared to before and after measurements).
- Before curfew, the percentage of all sessions that started after 9 p.m. was 7.8%. During the first curfew, this number dropped to 2.5%. This is a decline of more than 60%. During the second curfew, this percentage recovered to 7.9%, almost identical to the before curfew measurement.
- The percentage of sessions that started exactly between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. decreased to 1.5% during the first curfew, a decline of more than 50%. There was barely any difference between the 9 p.m.–10 p.m. start times of the second curfew (3.6%) and the before curfew measurement (3.5%). We observed no late-evening decline during the second curfew, as opposed to the first curfew.
4. Discussion
4.1. Lockdown Effects
4.2. Demand Migration
4.3. User Segments
4.4. Limitations
5. Conclusions
5.1. Conclusions
- How does the decrease in kWh sales compare to the decrease in petrol sales for traditional vehicles? (2020–2021)
- Does this decrease also differ between specific user segments? (2020–2022)
- What was the effect of the 2021 curfews on the start times of charging in the evening? (2021)
5.2. Future Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Example |
---|---|
RFID | 60DF4D78 |
Address | Prinsengracht 767, Amsterdam |
Start Connection Date Time | 24−04−2015 13:56:00 |
End Connection Date Time | 24−04−2015 17:14:00 |
Connection Time | 2:18:00 |
Volume | 6.73 kWh |
Analysis | Question | Data Selection | Indicators | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|
Section 3.1— Impact analysis | What is the overall effect of COVID-19 lockdowns on various charging indicators? (2020–2022) | All EV drivers | Connection times, kWh charged, sessions, users & stations | Baseline comparison, Line plot, Summary stats |
Section 3.2— Fuel comparison | How does the decrease in kWh sales compare to the decrease in petrol sales for traditional vehicles? (2020–2021) | All chargepoints | kWh charged (and external data of petrol sold) | Baseline comparison, Line plot |
Section 3.3— User comparison | Does this decrease also differ between specific user segments? (2020–2022) | Employees, Office chargers, Taxi drivers, Shared vehicles | kWh charged | Fingerprinting, Baseline comparison, Line plot |
Section 3.4— Curfew analysis | What was the effect of the 2021 curfews on the start times of charging in the evening? (2021) | All EV drivers | Start times of charging in the evening | Summary stats, Violin plot |
Date | Sessions/ User | Energy/Session (kWh) | Connection Time | Unique Number of Charging Stations/User | Sum of Energy Charged (kWh) | Number of Unique Neighbourhoods Visited |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 2020 | 14.9 | 16.5 | 12.7 | 3.2 | 221 | 1.94 |
March 2022 | 10.9 | 17.0 | 11.9 | 2.6 | 159 | 1.58 |
Comparison Group | Parameters |
---|---|
All sessions (full set) | All public charging data |
Sloterdijk Office Area | All charging from 17 charging points in an office location |
Suspected employees (office/commuters) | All charging sessions during weekdays (mon-fr), starting between 7–10 a.m. and connected between 3–10 h |
Active ChargePoints and Users: Sessions filtered on ChargePoints that have been online since Jan−2020 | |||
Point in time | # unique RFIDs (1 month) | Locations (used in 1 month) | RFIDs / Locations (1 month) |
January 2020 | 61,866 | 7730 | 8 |
June 2020 | 45,460 | 7502 | 6.06 |
January 2021 * | 59,092 | 7490 | 7.89 |
June 2021 | 71,925 | 7509 | 9.58 |
January 2022 | 85,344 | 7326 | 11.65 |
June 2022 | 102,232 | 7059 | 14.48 |
October 2022 | 119,866 | 7339 | 16.33 |
Active ChargePoints and Users:Full Set (Without Jan−2020 filter) | |||
Point in time | # Unique rfids (1 month) | # of used locations (1 month) | RFID / location (1 month) |
January 2020 | 61,987 | 7730 | 8 |
June 2020 | 54,787 | 8841 | 6.19 |
January 2021 | 66,752 | 10,409 | 6.41 |
June 2021 | 85,225 | 11,880 | 7.17 |
January 2022 | 110,900 | 13,310 | 8.33 |
June 2022 | 143,808 | 14,472 | 9.94 |
October 2022 | 169,989 | 15,827 | 10.74 |
Summary Statistics | Before Curfew ~1.5 Month Sample | First Curfew ~2 Month Sample | Second Curfew ~1 Month Sample | After Curfew ~1 Month Sample |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sample size (# of sessions) | 700,633 | 910,988 | 314,976 | 340,565 |
# of sessions that started between 7 p.m.–8 p.m. | 37,477 | 70,828 | 23,453 | 20,207 |
Percentage | 5.3% | 7.8% | 7.4% | 5.9% |
# of sessions that started between 8 p.m.–9 p.m. | 30,052 | 40,526 | 16,958 | 15,283 |
Percentage | 4.3% | 4.5% | 5.4% | 4.5% |
# of sessions after 9 p.m. | 54,530 | 22,828 | 25,153 | 22,646 |
Percentage | 7.8 % | 2.5% | 7.9% | 6.6% |
# of sessions that started between 9 p.m.−10 p.m. | 24,660 | 13,786 | 11,361 | 11,046 |
Percentage | 3.5% | 1.5% | 3.6% | 3.2% |
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Share and Cite
van der Koogh, M.; Wolbertus, R.; Heller, R. Charging after Lockdown: The Aftermath of COVID-19 Policies on Electric Vehicle Charging Behaviour in The Netherlands. World Electr. Veh. J. 2023, 14, 67. https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj14030067
van der Koogh M, Wolbertus R, Heller R. Charging after Lockdown: The Aftermath of COVID-19 Policies on Electric Vehicle Charging Behaviour in The Netherlands. World Electric Vehicle Journal. 2023; 14(3):67. https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj14030067
Chicago/Turabian Stylevan der Koogh, Mylène, Rick Wolbertus, and Renee Heller. 2023. "Charging after Lockdown: The Aftermath of COVID-19 Policies on Electric Vehicle Charging Behaviour in The Netherlands" World Electric Vehicle Journal 14, no. 3: 67. https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj14030067
APA Stylevan der Koogh, M., Wolbertus, R., & Heller, R. (2023). Charging after Lockdown: The Aftermath of COVID-19 Policies on Electric Vehicle Charging Behaviour in The Netherlands. World Electric Vehicle Journal, 14(3), 67. https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj14030067