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Market Potential of Hydrogen Fuel Cell Vehicles in Beijing: A Spatial Agent-based Model Approach

Abstract

Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles (HFCVs) are vital for advancing the hydrogen economy and decarbonizing the transportation sector. However, research on HFCV market dynamics in passenger vehicles is limited, especially incorporating both market competition from other vehicle types and the comprehensive supply–demand market dynamics. To bridge this gap, our study proposed a spatial agent-based model to simulate the HFCV market evolution, with the aim of finding effective strategies and policy implications for breaking the diffusion dilemma of the HFCV market. We calibrated the model using survey data (N=1065) collected from Beijing and evaluated its performance across five “What-If” scenarios. Results indicate that HFCVs and hydrogen stations are difficult to penetrate under the current conditions, despite HFCV applicants and market share growing by 37.5% and 15.63%, respectively. Consumer perceptions on cost, social and environment have greater impacts on HFCV proliferation than facility availability. The HFCV purchase subsidy has much greater impact than the technological learning rate, greatly accelerating its market emergence timing. Finally, HFCVs’ diffusion significantly influences the market of battery electric vehicles.

Funding source: We thank the Shenzhen Park of Hetao Shenzhen-Hong Kong Science and Technology Innovation Cooperation Zone and this research has been supported by the “Theories for Spatiotemporal Intelligence and Reliable Data Analysis” (Project ID: HZQSWS-KCCYB-2024058), the European Research Council (ERC) for the iDODDLE project (grant #101003083), the Shenzhen Municipal Science and Technology Innovation Commission (Grant No.: JCYJ20230807140401003), the Research Grants from the Smart Cities Research Institute (Grant No.: CDAR and CDA9) and Research Institute for Sustainable Urban Development (Grant No.: BBWR) at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Related subjects: Applications & Pathways
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/content/journal7924
2025-10-09
2025-12-05
/content/journal7924
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