TY - JOUR
T1 - PV Solar-Powered Electric Vehicles for Inter-Campus Student Transport and Low CO2 Emissions
T2 - A One-Year Case Study from the University of Cuenca, Ecuador
AU - Ochoa Correa, Danny Vinicio
AU - Sempértegui Moscoso, María Emilia
AU - Villa Ávila, Edisson Andrés
AU - Arévalo Cordero, Wilian Paúl
AU - Espinoza Abad, Juan Leonardo
AU - Villa Ávila, Edisson Andrés
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.
PY - 2025/8
Y1 - 2025/8
N2 - This study evaluates a solar-powered electric mobility pilot implemented at the University of Cuenca (Ecuador), combining two electric vans with daytime charging from a 35 kWp PV microgrid. Real-world monitoring with SCADA covered one year of operation, including efficiency tests across urban, highway, and mountainous routes. Over the monitored period, the fleet completed 5256 km in 1384 trips with an average occupancy of approximately 87%. Energy use averaged 0.17 kWh/km, totaling 893.52 kWh, of which about 98.2% came directly from on-site PV generation; only 2.41% of the annual PV output was required for vehicle charging. This avoided 1310.52 kg of CO2 emissions compared to conventional vehicles. Operating costs were reduced by institutional electricity tariffs (0.065 USD/kWh) and the absence of additional PV investment, with estimated savings of around USD 2432 per vehicle annually. Practical guidance from the pilot includes aligning fleet schedules with peak solar generation, ensuring access to slow daytime charging points, maintaining high occupancy through route management, and using basic monitoring to verify performance. These results confirm the technical feasibility, economic competitiveness, and replicability of solar-electric transport in institutional settings with suitable solar resources and infrastructure.
AB - This study evaluates a solar-powered electric mobility pilot implemented at the University of Cuenca (Ecuador), combining two electric vans with daytime charging from a 35 kWp PV microgrid. Real-world monitoring with SCADA covered one year of operation, including efficiency tests across urban, highway, and mountainous routes. Over the monitored period, the fleet completed 5256 km in 1384 trips with an average occupancy of approximately 87%. Energy use averaged 0.17 kWh/km, totaling 893.52 kWh, of which about 98.2% came directly from on-site PV generation; only 2.41% of the annual PV output was required for vehicle charging. This avoided 1310.52 kg of CO2 emissions compared to conventional vehicles. Operating costs were reduced by institutional electricity tariffs (0.065 USD/kWh) and the absence of additional PV investment, with estimated savings of around USD 2432 per vehicle annually. Practical guidance from the pilot includes aligning fleet schedules with peak solar generation, ensuring access to slow daytime charging points, maintaining high occupancy through route management, and using basic monitoring to verify performance. These results confirm the technical feasibility, economic competitiveness, and replicability of solar-electric transport in institutional settings with suitable solar resources and infrastructure.
KW - CO reduction
KW - electric vehicles
KW - microgrid
KW - photovoltaic charging
KW - sustainable mobility
KW - Electric vehicles
KW - Photovoltaic charging
KW - Sustainable mobility
KW - CO2 reduction
KW - Microgrid
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016176573
UR - https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/17/17/7595
U2 - 10.3390/su17177595
DO - 10.3390/su17177595
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:105016176573
SN - 2071-1050
VL - 17
SP - 1
EP - 25
JO - Sustainability (Switzerland)
JF - Sustainability (Switzerland)
IS - 17
M1 - 7595
ER -