People | Locations | Statistics |
---|---|---|
Ziakopoulos, Apostolos | Athens |
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Vigliani, Alessandro | Turin |
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Catani, Jacopo | Rome |
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Statheros, Thomas | Stevenage |
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Utriainen, Roni | Tampere |
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Guglieri, Giorgio | Turin |
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Martínez Sánchez, Joaquín |
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Tobolar, Jakub |
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Volodarets, M. |
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Piwowar, Piotr |
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Tennoy, Aud | Oslo |
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Matos, Ana Rita |
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Cicevic, Svetlana |
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Sommer, Carsten | Kassel |
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Liu, Meiqi |
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Pirdavani, Ali | Hasselt |
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Niklaß, Malte |
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Lima, Pedro | Braga |
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Turunen, Anu W. |
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Antunes, Carlos Henggeler |
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Krasnov, Oleg A. |
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Lopes, Joao P. |
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Turan, Osman |
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Lučanin, Vojkan | Belgrade |
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Tanaskovic, Jovan |
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Rubens, Gerardo Zarazua De
Aarhus University
in Cooperation with on an Cooperation-Score of 37%
Topics
- case study
- vehicle
- vehicle to grid
- electric vehicle
- price
- city
- data
- automobile
- survey
- passenger
- vehicle occupant
- transport policy
- transportation policy
- electrification
- connectivity
- automation
- focus group
- research project
- industry
- climate change
- abstract
- combustion
- internal combustion engine
- infrastructure
- consumer
- monitoring
- charging infrastructure
- region
- law
- cluster analysis
- industry structure
- perception
- public transport
- investment
- stakeholder
- vehicle fleet
- accumulator
- automobile industry
- market
- supplier
- recommendation
- autumn
- mobility-as-a-service
- business model
- passenger traffic
- governance
- transit operator
- incentive
- driving
- carbon
- income
- regression analysis
- child
- fuel
- male
- battery life
- demographics
- battery charging time
- weight
- cladding
- planning
- geography
- ownership
- implementation
- renewable energy source
- warehousing
- face
- economics
- experiment
- theory
- medication
- medicine
- stucco
- thesis
- anxiety
- fear
- social psychology
- assessment
- safety
- acceleration
- gender
- revenue
- shopping facility
- stated preference
- vision
- fatality
- climate
- expected value
- sociology
- political science
- freezing
- mountain
- bankruptcy
- social change
- compliance
- environmental science
- engineering
- asia
- standardisation
- politics
- policy making
- mobility pattern
- variable
- education
- estimate
- logit
- gasoline
- econometrics
- consumer preference
- machinery
- learning
- machine learning
- human being
- prevention
- poison
- marketing
- injury
- ergonomics
- human factor
- contaminant
- emergency
- noise
- crash
- density
- costs
- travel
- travel distance
- trip length
- environmental policy
- fossil fuel
- population density
- regional traffic
- health
- customer
- specification
- signalling
- purchasing
- government
- shopping
- sale
- show 110 more
Publications (36/36 displayed)
- 2021Leveraging user-based innovation in vehicle-to-X and vehicle-to-grid adoptioncitations
- 2020Understanding the socio-technical nexus of Nordic electric vehicle (EV) barrierscitations
- 2020Rethinking the spatiality of Nordic electric vehicles and their popularity in urban environments: Moving beyond the city?citations
- 2020Rethinking the spatiality of Nordic electric vehicles and their popularity in urban environmentscitations
- 2020Novel or normal? Electric vehicles and the dialectic transition of Nordic automobilitycitations
- 2020Understanding the socio-technical nexus of Nordic Electric Vehicle (EV) barriers: a qualitative discussion of range, price, charging and knowledgecitations
- 2020Actors, business models, and innovation activity systems for vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technology: a comprehensive reviewcitations
- 2020Assessing the socio-demographic, technical, economic and behavioral factors of Nordic electric vehicle adoption and the influence of vehicle-to-grid preferencescitations
- 2020The market case for electric mobilitycitations
- 2020Actors, business models, and innovation activity systems for vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technologycitations
- 2019Navigating expert skepticism and consumer distrust: Rethinking the barriers to vehicle-to-grid (V2G) in the Nordic regioncitations
- 2019Willingness to pay for electric vehicles and vehicle-to-grid applicationscitations
- 2019Fear and loathing of electric vehicles: The reactionary rhetoric of range anxietycitations
- 2019Are electric vehicles masculinized? Gender, identity, and environmental values in Nordic transport practices and vehicle-to-grid (V2G)preferencescitations
- 2019Energy Injustice and Nordic Electric Mobility: Inequality, Elitism, and Externalities in the Electrification of Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) Transportcitations
- 2019Vehicle-to-Gridcitations
- 2019Public perceptions of electric vehicles and vehicle-to-grid (V2G)citations
- 2019Contested visions and sociotechnical expectations of electric mobility and vehicle-to-grid innovation in five Nordic countriescitations
- 2019Public perceptions of electric vehicles and vehicle-to-grid (V2G): Insights from a Nordic focus group studycitations
- 2019The coproduction of electric mobility: Selectivity, conformity and fragmentation in the sociotechnical acceptance of vehicle-to-grid (V2G) standardscitations
- 2019Income, political affiliation, urbanism and geography in stated preferences for electric vehicles (EVs) and vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technologies in Northern Europecitations
- 2019Conspicuous diffusion:Theorizing how status drives innovation in electric mobilitycitations
- 2019Willingness to pay for electric vehicles and vehicle-to-grid applications: A Nordic choice experimentcitations
- 2019Who will buy electric vehicles after early adopters? Using machine learning to identify the electric vehicle mainstream marketcitations
- 2019Energy Injustice and Nordic Electric Mobilitycitations
- 2019Navigating expert skepticism and consumer distrustcitations
- 2019Are electric vehicles masculinized? Gender, identity, and environmental values in Nordic transport practices and vehicle-to-grid (V2G) preferencescitations
- 2018Contested visions and sociotechnical expectations of electric mobility and vehicle-to-grid innovation in five Nordic countriescitations
- 2018Promoting Vehicle to Grid (V2G) in the Nordic Regioncitations
- 2018Policy mechanisms to accelerate electric vehicle adoptioncitations
- 2018Beyond emissions and economics: Rethinking the co-benefits of electric vehicles (EVs) and vehicle-to-grid (V2G)citations
- 2018Policy mechanisms to accelerate electric vehicle adoption: A qualitative review from the Nordic regioncitations
- 2018Reviewing Nordic transport challenges and climate policy priorities: Expert perceptions of decarbonisation in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Swedencitations
- 2018Promoting Vehicle to Grid (V2G) in the Nordic region: Expert advice on policy mechanisms for accelerated diffusioncitations
- 2018Optimizing innovation, carbon and health in transport: Assessing socially optimal electric mobility and vehicle-to-grid pathways in Denmarkcitations
- 2018Dismissive and deceptive car dealerships create barriers to electric vehicle adoption at the point of salecitations
Places of action
article
Fear and loathing of electric vehicles: The reactionary rhetoric of range anxiety
Abstract
Abstract “Range anxiety,” defined as the psychological anxiety a consumer experiences in response to the limited range of an electric vehicle, continues to be labelled and presented as one of the most pressing barriers to their mainstream diffusion. As a result, academia, policymakers and even industry have focused on addressing the range anxiety barrier in order to accelerate adoption. Much literature recognizes that range anxiety is increasingly psychological, rather than technical, in its nature. However, we argue in this paper that even psychological and technical explanations are incomplete. We examine range anxiety through Hirschman’s Rhetoric of Reaction, which supposes that conservative forces may oppose change by propagating theses related to jeopardy, perversity, and futility. To do so, we use three qualitative methods to understand the role of range anxiety triangulated via a variety of perspectives: 227 semi-structured interviews with experts at 201 institutions, a survey with nearly 5000 respondents, and 8 focus groups, all across 17 cities in the five Nordic countries. We find evidence where consumers and experts use and perpetuate the rhetoric of reaction, particularly the jeopardy thesis. We conclude with a reexamination of the policies geared to assuage range-based barriers, which a construction of range anxiety as a rhetorical excuse would render as ineffective or inefficient, as well as future implications for diffusion theory.
Topics
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