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Published in: Transportation 5/2012

01-09-2012

Impact of ICT access on personal activity space and greenhouse gas production: evidence from Quebec City, Canada

Authors: Luis F. Miranda-Moreno, Naveen Eluru, Martin Lee-Gosselin, Tyler Kreider

Published in: Transportation | Issue 5/2012

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Abstract

This paper presents an approach to investigating the impact of information and communication technologies (ICTs) on travel behaviour and its environmental effects. The paper focuses on the spatial dispersion of out-of-home activities and travel (activity space) and greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs) at the level of the individual. An original method, combining spatial analysis in a geographic information system with advanced regression techniques, is proposed to explore these potentially complex relationships in the case of access to mobile phones and the internet, while taking into account the influence of socio-economics and built environment factors. The proposed methodology is tested using a 7-day activity-based survey in Quebec City in 2003–2004, a juncture of particular interest because these ICTs had recently crossed the threshold of 40 % (mobile phone) and 60 % (home-based internet) penetration at the time. The study period also largely pre-dates the era of mobile internet access. Among other results, socio-demographic factors were found to significantly affect both ICT access and travel out-comes. The built environment, represented by neighbourhood typologies, also played an important role. However, it was found that after controlling for the self-selection effect, built environment and socio-demographics, those who had a mobile phone available produced 30 % more GHGs during the observed week than those who did not. This higher level of GHG pro-duction was accompanied by a 12 % higher measure of activity dispersion. On the other hand, having internet access at home was associated with lower GHGs (−19 %) and lesser activity dispersion (−25 %). Possibly, mobile phones enable individuals to cover more space and produce more emissions, while the internet provides opportunities to stay at home or avoid motorized travel thus reducing emissions. The estimated effects of having a mobile phone were not only negative but also larger in magnitude from the environmental point of view than those of fixed internet access. However, the results of this study also suggest that access to mobile phones and internet may have substantial and compensatory effects at the individual level that are undetected when using model structures that do not take into account that unobserved factors may influence both ICT choices and travel outcomes.

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Footnotes
1
Endogeneity may be present in statistical models owing to the correlation between ICT access or use and travel outcomes (e.g., car usage and GHGs).
 
2
In other words, ICT can motivate travel and at the same time travel can motivate ICT access and use.
 
3
The copula framework refers to coupling techniques of marginal error terms from various distributions through a pre-defined relationship. The copula approach allows for many flexible coupling options.
 
4
In 2006, the north shore communities that had about 525,000 of the metropolitan Quebec city region’s population had 178 km of “autoroutes”, or about 33 km for per 100,000 inhabitants. By comparison, the whole island of Montréal had about 200 km of “autoroutes” for about 1,855,000 people, or about 11 km per 100,000 inhabitants.
 
5
Centrographic analysis refers to spatial statistical measures of central tendency and dispersion such as mean centre, standard deviational ellipse, elongation and orientation.
 
6
Each trip was associated with an average speed according to the departure time (peak or off-peak period) and the origin and destination. The speeds and the fuel consumption correction factors were estimated by the Quebec Ministry of Transport (Barla et al. 2011).
 
7
Non-motorized trips were covered by the survey, but are treated as having zero GHG emissions.
 
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Metadata
Title
Impact of ICT access on personal activity space and greenhouse gas production: evidence from Quebec City, Canada
Authors
Luis F. Miranda-Moreno
Naveen Eluru
Martin Lee-Gosselin
Tyler Kreider
Publication date
01-09-2012
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Transportation / Issue 5/2012
Print ISSN: 0049-4488
Electronic ISSN: 1572-9435
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11116-012-9428-3

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