Causal spillover effects of electric vehicle charging station placement on local businesses: a staggered adoption study
M. Mavin De Silva, Callie Clark, Tadachika Nakayama, Takahiro Yabe

TL;DR
This study uses a quasi-experimental design with mobile data to causally assess how electric vehicle charging station placements influence local business visitation, revealing context-dependent economic spillovers.
Contribution
It introduces a novel matching approach leveraging staggered EVCS deployment data to accurately estimate local economic impacts in urban settings.
Findings
EVCS placements increase customer traffic significantly.
Effects are concentrated in recreational venues in NYC.
Routine destinations like groceries also benefit in California.
Abstract
Understanding the economic impacts of the placement of electric vehicle charging stations (EVCSs) is crucial for planning infrastructure systems that benefit the broader community. Theoretical models have been used to predict human behavior during charging events, however, these models have often neglected the complexity of trip patterns, and have underestimated the real-world impacts of such infrastructure on the local economy. In this paper, we design a quasi-experiment using mobile phone GPS location and EVCS deployment history data to analyze the causal impact of EVCS placement on visitation patterns to businesses. More specifically, we leverage the staggered placement of EVCSs in New York City and California Bay Area to match treated and control businesses that share similar characteristics including the business sector, location, and pre-treatment visitation count. By comparing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectric Vehicles and Infrastructure · Transportation and Mobility Innovations · Urban and Freight Transport Logistics
