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Journal Article

Citation

Aarhaug J, Fearnley N, Johnsson E. Res. Transp. Econ. 2023; 98: e101279.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.retrec.2023.101279

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The rapid deployment of shared electric scooters (e-scooters) has resulted in much attention from the public and regulators. In this paper we look at what role e-scooters have in the mobility system in Oslo, Norway. Previous research suggests that e-scooters fill three main functions: first by serving areas underserved by other modes; second that they replace public transport (PT) trips where the generalised costs of PT are relatively high; and third that they can play an important role as first/last mile mode. In this paper we look at the interaction between e-scooters and PT. We ask: do shared e-scooters compete with or complement public transport? We analyse competition between e-scooters and other modes by combining four data-sources: trip data from e-scooter trips; travel planner data for alternative modes; a survey conducted among e-scooter users collected for the purpose of the study; and the regional travel survey, obtained from the PT authority in the greater Oslo area. We find that e-scooters are both competing with and complementing PT. For most e-scooter trips, the PT alternative would take twice as much time, or more. A sizable share of e-scooter trips are indeed access and egress to/from PT.


Language: en

Keywords

E-scooter; Intermodal competition; Intermodal trips; Oslo; Public transport; Regulation

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