Bus engine technology
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Scope
Bus engine technology describes the current alternatives for engine technology for public bus-transportation in western Europe. R↻
Definition
Causality
- No parent variables
Data
Unit
- no unit
Formula
Result
The values in the result database refer to the rows of this table.
Row | Name of technology | Probability in 1997 | Probability in 2020 |
---|---|---|---|
1 | BAU A (Current fleet) | 0.5 | 0.1 |
2 | EURO 2 D2 | 0e+000 | 0e+000 |
3 | EURO 3 D3 (Modern diesel to meet EURO III standard) | 0.3 | 0.3 |
4 | CRT filter C (Diesel with particle trap EURO II with CRT traps) | 0.25 | 0.3 |
5 | Biodiesel B | 0e+000 | 0e+000 |
6 | Alcohol E | 0e+000 | 0e+000 |
7 | Propane G23 | 0e+000 | 0e+000 |
8 | Natural gas G22 | 0e+000 | 0e+000 |
9 | Propane G32 | 0e+000 | 0e+000 |
10 | Natural gas G31 (Natural gas bus) | 0.05 | 0.3 |
References
- ↑ YTV, Helsinki Metropolitan Area Council (1999). Vaihtoehtoisten polttoaineiden käyttömahdollisuudet joukkoliikenteessä pääkaupunkiseudulla ( The possibilities to use alternative fuels in public transport in the Helsinki metropolitan area). Helsinki Metropolitan Area Publication Series B 1999:5 (in Finnish).
- ↑ YTV, Helsinki Metropolitan Area Council (1999). Helsinki Metropolitan Area Transport System Plan PLJ 1998. Helsinki Metropolitan Area Publication Series A 1999:4.