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Research article2025Peer reviewedOpen access

Preferences for energy efficient cars in New Delhi: a discrete choice experiment exploring regulatory and non-regulatory interventions

Sharma, Charu Grover; Bansal, Sangeeta; Martinez-Cruz, Adan L.

Abstract

Tackling India's contribution to global carbon emissions is a priority from both national and international perspectives. Energy efficiency gains in Indian's transportation sector have been suggested as a promising way to mitigate carbon emissions. The Indian government is considering fuel efficiency labels for new passenger cars. Via a discrete choice experiment, this paper investigates how regulatory and non-regulatory interventions can be used to boost adoption of energy efficient cars in India. It estimates New Delhi's car buyers' willingness to pay (WTP) for a car displaying a best-efficiency label (which is about 54 to 85% more fuel efficient as compared to a usual car) to be 6 thousand USD or about 30% of what respondents would be willing to pay for a new car. However, the informational nudge embedded in labeling systems may not be enough to boost uptake of efficient cars. Thus, via a split-sample approach, it further investigates the potential of combining non-regulatory interventions-labeling system and peer effects-with a driving restrictions regulation. WTP for a best-efficiency label car increases by over 100% to 13.46 thousand USD under a driving restrictions regulation. The difference in WTP for a best-efficiency label across driving restrictions and no driving restrictions scenarios reflect regulatory costs faced by car drivers. By including an interaction effect between best-efficiency label and mileage in the econometric specifications, we show that these costs depend on the actual mileage of the car under consideration-with lower regulatory costs as actual efficiency improves. A latent class logit specification suggests that around 40% to 52% of respondents-labeled extrinsically-motivated adopters-would be responsive to peer effects.

Keywords

Driving restrictions; Fuel efficiency labels; Extrinsically-motivated adopters; Peer effects; New Delhi

Published in

Transportation
2025
Publisher: SPRINGER

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Transport Systems and Logistics
Economics

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11116-025-10581-1

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/140629