Transportation contributes a substantial fraction of all greenhouse gas emissions. One approach for reducing such emissions is to modify vehicles' route choices to minimize their fuel consumption or emission, which is known as eco-routing. Most eco-routing is based on vehicles choosing routes that minimize their individual fuel consumption or emissions. The Braess paradox demonstrates that when vehicles choose routes to minimize their individual goals, the aggregate effect may paradoxically result in the opposite net effect due to changes in congestion patterns. We construct a multiclass user equilibrium model in which some vehicles use eco-routing and others seek to minimize their individual travel times. Using this model, we show that the Braess paradox exists for eco-routing. If a large number of vehicles are trying to minimize their fuel consumption or emissions, the total fuel consumption or emissions may increase. We then solve the multiclass user equilibrium on publicly available city network data, and find that eco-routing results in increases in fuel consumption and emissions on some city networks as well.
翻译:减少这种排放的方法之一是修改车辆路线选择,以尽量减少燃料消耗或排放,即生态路线; 生态路线大多以选择尽量减少个人燃料消耗或排放的路线为依据; 布拉伊斯悖论表明,当车辆选择路线以尽量减少其个别目标时,总效果可能会自相矛盾地造成相反的净效应,因为堵塞模式的变化。 我们建立了一个多级用户平衡模式,一些车辆使用生态路线,而另一些车辆则试图尽量减少其个人旅行时间。我们使用这一模式,表明存在生态路线的布拉伊斯悖论。如果大量车辆试图尽量减少燃料消耗或排放,燃料消耗或排放总量可能会增加。然后,我们用公开的城市网络数据解决多级用户平衡问题,发现生态路线导致某些城市网络的燃料消耗和排放增加。