Open Net Zero logo
The Responsiveness of Fuel Demand to Gasoline Price in Passenger Transport
OwnerKing Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center (KAPSARC) - view all
Update frequencyunknown
Last updated4 months ago
Format
Overview

About the Project: We developed the KAPSARC Energy Model for Saudi Arabia (KEM-SA) to understand the dynamics of the country’s energy system. It is a partial equilibrium model formulated as a mixed complementarity problem to capture the administered prices that permeate the local economy. KEM-SA has been previously used to study the impacts of various industrial fuel pricing policies and improved residential efficiency on the energy economy. The passenger transportation model presented in this paper helps understand more of the end-use energy demand, and it is being integrated into KEM-SA. Key Points: Empirical estimates of fuel demand changes to price variation are based on historical consumption and prices, and can be applied as a single point estimate to a wide range of price movements. However, if fuel prices are set outside the boundaries of historical changes, policymakers may be concerned as to the validity of the empirically assessed price elasticity. We have developed a transport model to provide a techno-economic estimate of the price elasticity of fuel demand. It incorporates consumers’ choices as a result of several factors, including fuel substitutes, available transport modes, income, value of time and magnitude of price change Our findings from the application of this transport model to Saudi Arabia show that policymakers can have confidence that the empirical estimates are broadly valid, even for large changes and if prices move outside historical variations. In general, gasoline demand in Saudi Arabia is price inelastic due to the lack of fuel and modal substitutes. However, our approach suggests that the response may become more pronounced when the magnitude of the change increases. The cross-price elasticity of diesel is not constant. Demand for diesel will increase if gasoline price is raised significantly. Motorists may, for example, opt for diesel-based public transport, such as trains or buses, for long distance local trips. The change in jet-fuel use is negligible.

Cross-price elasticityPublicationsTransportation fuelsfuel pricetransport
Additional Information
KeyValue
guidhttps://datasource.kapsarc.org/api/v2/catalog/datasets/the-responsiveness-of-fuel-demand-to-gasoline-price-in-passenger-transport
identifierthe-responsiveness-of-fuel-demand-to-gasoline-price-in-passenger-transport
language["http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/iso639-1/en"]
theme["https://datasource.kapsarc.org/id/theme/KAPSARC%20Publications"]
urihttps://datasource.kapsarc.org/api/v2/catalog/datasets/the-responsiveness-of-fuel-demand-to-gasoline-price-in-passenger-transport
harvest_object_id539a4bb9-d8bc-46c7-ad04-1a9f26795329
harvest_source_id66a4911c-4fc5-4ce9-af4f-d84380e3dd24
harvest_source_titleKAPSARC Energy Data Portal
Files
  • JSON
    2b809eb3-247d-477f-ad09-fae66cf7cd1e
  • CSV
    5957cfac-6450-4534-9021-be05ff228e16
Share this Dataset
the-responsiveness-of-fuel-demand-to-gasoline-price-in-passenger-transport
Access and Licensing
Access conditionsAccess control: Unknown
License conditionsLicense: