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Article

Identifying and Selecting Key Sustainable Parameters for the Monitoring of e-Powered Micro Personal Mobility Vehicles. Evidence from Italy

Department of Civil, Environment, Land and Architecture Engineering and Mathematics (DICATAM), University of Brescia, Via Branze 43, 25123 Brescia, Italy
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Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sustainability 2021, 13(16), 9226; https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su13169226
Submission received: 5 August 2021 / Revised: 13 August 2021 / Accepted: 15 August 2021 / Published: 17 August 2021

Abstract

:
The recent invasion of electric-powered personal mobility vehicles (e-PMVs) in many cities worldwide has disputed the transport sector and captured the attention of academics, practitioners, and public administrators. Indeed, these vehicles are believed to be sustainable transport alternatives. Therefore, understanding how to evaluate and monitor the related performance is crucial and may be addressed by suitable key sustainable parameters (KSPs) to inform on the excellences and criticalities of e-PMVs. Previous research has focused largely on “how to measure and manage” KSPs rather than “what to measure”. Conversely, as far as the authors know, no study investigated objective methods for identifying and selecting top KSPs. This paper covers this gap by proposing a cohesive approach, which identifies a long list of KSPs, defines their properties, involves experts to elicit judgments for each KSP, evaluates the long list, and returns the most promising set. This approach is demonstrated with an application based on an Italian survey. A circumscribed and relevant set of six overlapping KSPs is derived by merging two different approaches. These results may support the opportunity to assess the performance of e-PMVs among cities according to a common set of KSPs.

1. Introduction

Nowadays, sustainability has become one of the core objectives of the transport sector worldwide. The rapid growth in energy consumption, environmental pollution, and climate change is receiving increasing attention. These facts captured the attention of academics, practitioners, and public administrators to reinvent transport modes towards less energy-intensive solutions such as electric micromobility devices to achieve a more sustainable urban transport [1,2]. Generally speaking, electric micromobility refers to electric-powered micro personal mobility vehicles (e-PMVs) and aims to serve the mobility demand for short and medium-range trips (within 5 km). The e-PMVs include micro-vehicles that can be driven while seated (i.e., electric scooters, pedal-assisted or electric bicycles) or standing (i.e., e-kick scooters, segways, hoverboards, and monowheels).
Nowadays, e-PMVs (privately or shared) are mostly invading large urban contexts (e.g., Rome, Milan, Paris). They are believed to be an environmentally friendly new transport mode because they may increase community relationships, reduce emission levels, and improve air quality. In addition, e-PMVs could reduce traffic congestion—and consequently, travel times—due to the possibility of using a viable transport alternative in urban areas for many users. However, some studies showed that they could replace walking and cycling without reducing the use of private cars for short trips, e.g., [3]. Therefore, the praised sustainable benefits of this new transport mode could be wholly or partially disregarded [4,5,6,7].
Owing to this exceptional spread, the interest of academics, practitioners, and public administrators towards e-PMVs has grown considerably and caused several challenges, such as monitoring the performances of e-PMVs. For instance, many public administrators could be unprepared to monitor the performance of e-PMVs in their contexts (e.g., where to locate the charging infrastructures, the numbers of riders) without a clear and effective set of parameters representing their characteristics. Thus, these parameters are a fundamental input in monitoring e-PMVs because they help detect excellences and criticalities. Therefore, the selection of key sustainable parameters (KSPs) is crucial for this task.
However, little attention has been paid to the following three issues.
First, relevant inclusive reviews investigated many issues of e-PMVs, seeing as how they are a quite recent and hot research topic. O’Hern & Estgfaeller [8] provided a scientometric review to synthesise, sort rapidly, analyse bibliographic data, and display the evolution of mobility research in the field of micromobility in terms of time, region, and numbers of citations. Boglietti et al. [9] reviewed endogenous and exogenous issues of e-PMVs. The former refers to problems strictly related to the use of e-PMVs in public spaces, while the latter refers to the external effects of their use, therefore, their impact on users’ road safety and the environment. Lastly, Sengül and Mostofi [10] reviewed the impacts of e-PMVs according to travel behaviours, energy consumption, environmental impacts, safety, and related regulations. Surprisingly, despite these quite comprehensive reviews, there is a lack of research focused on identifying parameters (or indicators) suitable to evaluate and monitor e-PMV performance over time. Boglietti et al. [9] also noted this research gap and stressed the importance of monitoring e-PMVs with proper parameters.
Second, existing research is focused on the development of models and methods on how to measure and manage KSPs rather than on what to measure [8,9,10]. Indeed, previous research rarely investigated parameter selection mechanisms by objective methods.
Third, according to Castillo and Pitfiled [11] and Barabino et al. [12], selecting suitable KSPs presents some challenges, which require a systematic method to improve their acceptability and credibility among experts. Although many potential KSPs may be considered, the selection of a compact subset of them may be tricky. Moreover, since KSPs are only constructs of the e-PMV system, it is challenging to select those more suitable for its characterisation.
Considering the previous drawbacks and challenges, this study proposes a cohesive approach to identify and select a pool of KSPs able to provide a high-level direction for monitoring the performance of e-PMVs. At first, this approach identifies a long list of KSPs; next, it points out components and attributes for KSPs and involves experts to obtain judgments on each KSP. Finally, it evaluates and ranks KSPs by a weighted outcome score. These evaluations are carried out on the data collected by Italian experts involving academics, practitioners, and users of e-PMVs. This approach differs from ELASTIC, i.e., a framework for identifying and selecting sustainable transport indicators by UK experts [11]. Moreover, it differs from other research, which proposed an integrated approach to select a set of key performance indicators to monitor the transit service quality [12].
Since a key goal of each form of sustainable transport (including e-PMVs) is the evaluation of its performances, the content of this study contributes to the progress of analyses and monitoring on the use of e-PMVs for academics, practitioners, and public administrators. Indeed, this study sheds new light on a research area that has been largely neglected. For instance, academics and practitioners could re-think the need to accommodate e-PMVs in urban spaces, and public administrators could measure KSPs to evaluate their benefits and downfalls.
The remainder of the paper is structured as follows: Section 2 reviews the related and relevant literature. Section 3 describes the cohesive method characterised by six procedural steps to identify and select the most suitable KSPs describing the performance of e-PMVs. Section 4 presents the results of the most promising set of KSPs. Section 5 discusses the results in the context of the literature. Finally, Section 6 concludes the study and provides research perspectives.

2. State of the Art KSPs

The search of parameters in the literature was carried out through the Google Scholar and Scopus databases. These databases identified articles from the academic literature using multiple keywords (i.e., e-scooters, micromobility, sustainable micromobility, sustainable transport, environmental sustainability, electric vehicles, sustainable transport indicators). The reading of titles and abstracts enabled a more accurate selection of sources consistent with the topic studied. Given the number of identified parameters, we categorised them into key criteria, representing a reference theme. Each key criterion has an associated parameter category that can be further divided into sub-parameters and sub-sub-parameters (if any).
More precisely, Table 1 lists the recent literature and provides a summary of parameters for the possible evaluation of the performance of e-PMVs. Table 1 is organised into four parts. The first part contains sources, and the second specifies the number of key criteria (#KC), parameters (#P), and sub-parameters (#sP) for each source. The third part specifies which key criteria and parameters were investigated, and, finally, the fourth part shows how these parameters were selected from the literature. In addition, Table 1 is alphabetically ordered according to the source.
Data reported in Table 1 leads us to two considerations.
As for the first consideration, the key criteria concerned economic, environmental, safety, social, and urban and transport planning issues.
The economic criterion included the costs of users to use the service. Therefore, the cost reduction and increased performance of e-PMVs in terms of effectiveness and sustainability were considered. The economic criterion referred to the travel costs incurred by users and the time spent travelling due to traffic congestion. Indeed, market analyses showed that the costs of managing, maintaining, and operating e-PMVs were significantly lower than the vehicle itself. Furthermore, given the possibility of travelling on a priority lane, the use of e-PMVs reduced travel time compared to other means of transport [13,14].
The environmental criterion included several parameters to monitor the impact that e-PMVs had on the surrounding environment: energy savings, CO2 emissions, and other emissions. The release of CO2 is influenced by the materials utilised and the production processes, including the related charging stations. Emissions could depend on several facets, including the vehicle’s LCA emissions, type of fuel used, mode of transport replaced, and their daily management. Finally, parameters such as the battery capacity, alternative transport choice, consumption of energy use, or renewable energies could affect the energy saving of e-PMVs [5,15].
Being a transport mode, many authors highlighted the safety criterion in e-PMV systems. They considered, on a case-by-case basis, the internal and external users of the system. The parameters evaluated the number of crashes and types of injury associated with the crash. Consequently, other parameters focused on the optional devices available (for the vehicles or users) to prevent crashes or limit their injuries, or again the user’s knowledge of the traffic rules and the different types of speeds allowed, including the speed limit of the vehicle itself. Finally, some studies focused on the perception of safety both by pedestrians and by the user of the e-PMV [16,17,18].
The social criterion referred to studies examining the impact of e-PMVs on people’s lives and population characteristics, both in terms of user habits and fairness of the service to the population. Parameters were based on social and economic equity (i.e., gender, race, employment, education, income), the number of trips, kilometres travelled, travel time, and the average age of users. [19,20].
Finally, the urban and transport planning criterion considered the sustainability of e-PMVs within the definition of urban development and sustainable transport systems that involve the well-being of people and the design of the urban environment. Specifically, it included evaluating infrastructural parameters such as the presence or absence of routes dedicated to e-PMVs, recharging stations, rentals, or conflicts with the road or parking areas. Some parameters concerned the impacts on mobility systems depending on the use of urban space and a multimodality offer. Moreover, an analysis of the possible demand for e-PMVs grouped the population density, connection, and distance from the attractors of the city (e.g., city centre, shopping centres, schools, offices, parking lots) [21,22,23].
The second consideration concerned the selection of the parameters. It was carried out by three different approaches. The selection of parameters from previous literature (L) on e-PMVs is the prevalent type. By this approach, parameters were selected by drawing on previous relevant studies about e-PMVs. They ranged from road safety to the perception of users and non-users [18,21,24]. The second approach selected the parameters through specific corporate inquiries (C). Therefore, parameters were selected according to the goals or objectives of the organisations. The commonality between studies is the willingness to guide mobility strategies. For example, Schellong et al. [25] analysed the market of the main companies due to highlighted opportunities for mobility service providers and platforms. Clewlow [17] examined the potential of e-PMVs in several USA cities through a database of private companies. In both approaches, no report or study presented a ranking of the best parameters for evaluating e-PMVs. Conversely, the third approach is based on models and/or methods (M). More precisely, some studies applied simple regression [26] or spatial regression models [19,23,27] to existing e-PMV systems (e.g., Austin, Louisville, Minneapolis) to explore which parameters affect e-PMV travel or usage patterns. The regression highlighted the significant parameters related to, e.g., demographics, density, social or economic diversity, land use, design, distance to transit, and other transport-related variables that affect e-PMV travel or usage patterns. Caspi et al. [27] deduced that the level of employment and charging infrastructure influences the use of e-PMVs. Hosseinzadeh et al. [23] and Bai & Jiao [19] showed the relevance of proximity to certain attractive areas such as shopping centres or city centres.
From the previous literature, it appears that the study by Møller et al. [28] considered more sub-parameters, followed by Bai & Jiao [19] and Gossling [18] with 14, 13, and 11 sub-parameters, respectively. However, the categories developed did not fully include the identified criteria (e.g., territorial planning, security, economic, social, and environmental). Bai & Jiao [19] focused mainly on the social and urban planning and transport aspects. In contrast, Gossling [18] debated safety, and Møller et al. [28] used the environmental and economic facets. Gitelman et al. [26] considered four of the five key criteria identified and only left out the social aspects. Overall, the literature analysis showed particular attention to KSPs related to the aspects of urban planning and transport (42), environmental (41), safety (31), social (21), and economic (10).
Nevertheless, despite this high-quality literature, no study proposed a cohesive method to identify and select the most promising set of KSPs. This study covers this gap.
Table 1. Summary of potential parameters for the evaluation of the performance of e-PMVs.
Table 1. Summary of potential parameters for the evaluation of the performance of e-PMVs.
Source#KC#P#sPEconomicEnvironmentalSafetySocialUrban and Transport PlanningParameter Selection
UCCRESOECPSVFTRCPIPLITIATUCF
Abduljabbar et al., 2021 [13]455 L
Alessio, 2019 [29]344 L
Badeau et al., 2019 [16]111 L
Bai & Jiao, 2020 [19]3613 M
Cao et al., 2021 [20]345 L
Caspi et al., 2020 [27]233 M
Christoforou et al., 2021 [30]346 L
Clewlow et al., 2018 [17]222 C
Gitelman et al., 2020 [26]444 M
Gossling, 2020 [18]3511 L
Hawa et al., 2021 [31]266 L
Hollingsworth et al., 2019 [5]123 C
Hosseinzadeh et al., 2021 [23]248 M
Hwang, 2010 [15]122 L
International Transport Forum, 2020 [32]234 L
James et al., 2019 [24]256 L
Kopplin et al., 2021 [33]345 L
Møller et al., 2020 [28]3814 L
Nocerino et al., 2016 [34]341 L
Piazza et al., 2021 [35]344 M
Reck et al., 2021 [22]247 L
Scarpinella, 2020 [21]112 L
Schellong et al., 2019 [25]344 C
Siow et al., 2020 [36]233 L
Smith et al., 2018 [14]222 C
This is a representative but not a comprehensive list of references. #KC, number of key criteria; #P, number of parameters; #sP, number of sub-parameters; UC, user cost; CR, CO2 release; ES, energy-saving OE, other emissions; C, crashes; PS, perception of security; VF, vehicle features; TR, traffic rules; CP, characteristics of the population; IP, impact on people’s lives; I, infrastructure; TI, transport impact; AT, attractors; UF, urban centre features; L, literature; M, models and/or methods; C, corporate inquiries.

3. Methodology

The cohesive method for identifying and selecting a set of KSPs is organised into three main phases (and related steps) according to the scheme in Figure 1. Moreover, for the sake of synthesis, criteria, parameters, and sub-parameters will all be referred to as parameters (or KSPs) later. Each phase (and related steps) is described below.

3.1. Preliminary Phase

Phase A sets some preliminary tasks to frame both KSPs and their related properties. It runs according to steps (1) and (2).
Step (1) aims to collect a long list of the potential KPSs for e-PMVs. Such KSPs can be expanded into more specific sub-parameters to be able to consider each of them separately. In this method, the relevant literature is considered. It identifies the more comprehensive initial source of potential KSPs from scientific databases and reports, as shown in Table 1.
Step (2) aims to define the key properties of KSPs. To perform this task, two manageable components were considered according to [11,12]: (1) the methodological component of KSPs and (2) the sustainability component. The components represent relevant properties of the parameters. However, they could be too broad to cover the selection of KSPs. Therefore, an additional decomposition into more measurable and accurate related attributes was required. The literature suggested several attributes for the methodological component, and the main ones were taken from [11,12]:
  • Measurability: the possibility of evaluating a KSP in a theoretical and reliable way.
  • Ease of availability: the opportunity to easily collecting reliable parameter data at a reasonable cost.
  • Speed of availability: the option to regularly update the derived or calculated parameter data to minimise the time elapsed between two consecutive measurements.
  • Interpretability: the unambiguous output should report parameters that all interested parties easily understand.
Since e-PMVs are believed to be a sustainable mode of transport, the methodological component is accompanied by the sustainability component, according to the concept proposed by the Brundtland Commission [37]. The concept of sustainability is very broad and linked to the compatibility between the development of economic activities and environmental protection. Hence, four attributes for the sustainability component were considered in this study, which also included some of the key criteria that clustered parameters in Table 1, they were:
  • Social, a sustainable e-PMV system should contribute to social and spatial equity, meeting the basic mobility and accessibility needs of all social, economic, and geographical groups.
  • Environmental, a sustainable e-PMV system should minimise the consumption of natural resources, actively reduce transport-related emissions and waste.
  • Economic, a sustainable e-PMV system should contribute to economic growth and support market mechanisms that reflect the true social, economic, and environmental costs of activities.
  • Safety, a sustainable e-PMV system should be designed and managed to minimise the risks to health, and the number, severity, and risks of road crashes.
Although all attributes are general, each of them may have a specific level of importance because they vary to reflect different viewpoints.

3.2. Participation Phase

Phase B identifies a panel of stakeholders and takes their opinions about components and attributes and their parameters; it runs according to steps (3) and (4). Moreover, for the sake of synthesis, components and attributes will all be referred to as items in what follows, unless they were specified.
Defining the relevance of parameters is not a trivial task; it must consider specific requirements, issues of quality, etc. Therefore, the involvement of experts in the perceived evaluation of parameters is considered a significant phase, which characterises Step (3). Academics, practitioners and aware e-PMV users are here considered “experts”. Academics can provide a thorough and suitable evaluation of parameters related to components and attributes at a high level. Practitioners can provide a daily operational judgement from a managerial perspective. Aware e-PMV users can provide an applied evaluation from their viewpoint, which completes the previous theoretical and managerial ones, thus avoiding the common wide gap between users, practitioners, and academics [38]. The involvement of diverse experts is strongly recommended because the different sensitivities, training, and heterogeneous expertise could lead to a different evaluation of components and attributes of each parameter. Since these perceptions can vary due to the specific knowledge on KSPs, and, thus, provide different opinions towards components and attributes, a weighing process is required to derive the relative importance. Hence, weights of importance are attached to components and attributes according to objective methods. Indeed, weights can be directly attached by questioning experts on preferences for a single item. However, this approach might be flawed since humans have difficulties processing relevant information about all items into stable weights, especially when many items are evaluated, e.g., [11,39].
Several authors have proposed approaches to weighting items, e.g., [40,41,42]. In this study, a multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) is considered [43,44,45]. It has the advantage of simultaneously considering multiple aspects (e.g., criteria, goals, actions), both qualitative and quantitative, and enables us to highlight the different perspectives of stakeholders. Using known information (e.g., goals) and judgments expressed in numerical values by the decision-maker, the MCDA determines a compromising solution [46]. The MCDA can be performed by different approaches, each one with different pros and cons. This study chooses the analytic hierarchy process (AHP) due to its positive mitigation of bias risks [47,48,49]. It helps to model cases of uncertainty and risk because it can derive and combine multidimensional scales—where measures ordinarily do not exist—in a single scale of priority [50,51]. Furthermore, it provides a mathematical foundation (e.g., eigenvectors) that establishes weights from each judgment, arriving at objective evaluations.
The AHP consists of a pairwise comparison of items that generates a stable weight assignment. Moreover, in order to reduce possible biases in a decision-making process, the AHP generates a ratio scale for each set of pairwise comparisons to evaluate the consistency/inconsistency of the judgements provided. To do so, the AHP raises subjective comparisons and then aggregates the results into objective weights, solving the issue of subjectivity of the expert involved. Indeed, it resolves conflict or disagreements among groups that may have incompatible goals or positions [52,53,54,55,56]. The application of the AHP itself and all its properties eliminate excessive subjectivity because it translates subjective judgments into objective weights. The AHP results can be useful considering the different facets with multiple measurements that characterise the parameters of e-PMVs.
Expert involvement can consist of various approaches. According to Step (4), a survey is proposed to involve the largest number of interested experts in this study. Among the several survey types available, the choice of a web survey is suggested because of several advantages that make this procedure well-practicable [57]. In detail, the web survey (1) can elicit information at a low cost; (2) rapidly reach experts; (3) be directly compiled online, thus removing the choice to print the questionnaire; and (4) returns data ready to be processed. Moreover, the web surveys are non-intrusive, and the participation is free and without external pressure [57,58]. The use of a traditional e-mail survey would be an interesting choice. Indeed, it could be assumed that a file can be saved on a computer or in printed form, and the respondent does not necessarily need to be online to answer. However, the previous advantages suggest adopting a web survey. In addition, during the COVID-19 pandemic, web surveys were one of few applicable tools.
The web survey is organised in two sections and involves the experts twice. The survey has two chosen components (i.e., methodological and sustainability), and experts evaluated which one was more relevant and by how much (e.g., twice as much). Similarly, experts had to indicate an evaluation among the four attributes of each component. Secondly, a matrix containing all parameters and attributes (of both the components) is provided, and experts had to rate each parameter against each attribute.

3.3. Data Processing and Reporting

Phase C processes data collected among experts and returns the KPSs ranked with respect to the best values. It runs according to steps (5) and (6) as follows.
Step (5) processes data via two methods. The former includes the application of AHP to translate subjective judgments into objective weights. The second aggregates weights and outcome marks to compute the performance of each KSP.
More precisely, the AHP method consists of mathematical processing, which is organised into several stages. First, a matrix of pairwise comparisons is built for each expert while comparing items. In this matrix, rows and columns report items. Each entry is the weight assigned to an item with respect to one another. Second, starting from this matrix, a vector of weights for each item is first computed and next normalised. Third, since some inconsistency of judgment can be observed, a consistency test is performed to verify the reliability of judgments of each matrix.
More precisely, let:
  • J be the set of experts involved and j an individual expert;
  • P be the set of items and p an individual item, i.e., a component or an attribute;
  • wp/wq be the numerical judgment of the pairwise comparison between item p  P and q  P, respectively (for instance, wp/wq = 2/1 means item p   P is twice more important than item q  P; thus wq/wp = ½ means the opposite case);
  • Wp be the overall unnormalised weight of item p   P, and wp is its normalised value;
  • CI be the consistency index, which expresses the consistency/inconsistency of pairwise comparisons. Precisely, the CI measures whether the judgments of the participant are logical and consistent with the choices made throughout the survey;
  • λ m a x be the maximum eigenvalue needed to compute the measure of consistency;
  • RI be the random consistency index, a tabulated CI function of the maximum number of items.
The computation of weights and the consistency check of the judgments were performed according to the following four-step algorithm:
For each expert j J:
(1)
Build the matrix of pairwise comparisons for each item, as shown in Table 2.
(2)
Compute Wp and wp from this matrix. More precisely, among the several approaches, the vector of weight Wp is computed as follows:
W p = q = 1 n w p / w q n p     P  
Then, Wp is normalised through the average arithmetic method as follows:
w p = W p p = 1 n W p
(3)
Check the consistency.
First, λ m a x is computed as follows:
λ m a x = p = 1 n [ q = 1 n ( w p w q w p ) w p ] n
Second, it should be verified that λ m a x  ≥ n
Third, CI is calculated as follows:
C I = ( λ m a x n ) ( n 1 )
The evaluations are perfectly consistent if λmax = n, thus CI = 0.
Fourth, the RI is taken from Table 3 according to the number of items considered.
Finally, the consistency ratio is computed as follows:
C R = C I R I
The AHP considers the pairwise comparisons consistent when CR < 0.1 (10%); otherwise, the expert may be re-involved to revise his/her evaluations. More details of the application of AHP are provided in [48,49,50].
Once AHP returned weights, an aggregate score (denoted by SI) is computed for each parameter. This score is calculated by a simple additive weighting approach that combines the average weight of components and attributes and the outcome marks of each parameter. More precisely, let:
  • I be the set of KSPs and i an individual KSP;
  • M be the set of attributes of the methodological component and m be an individual attribute;
  • S be the set of attributes of the sustainability component and s be an individual attribute;
  • w1j be the weight of the methodological component returned by (2), according to the judgement of expert j J;
  • w2j be the weight of the sustainability component returned by (2), according to the judgement of expert j J;
  • w1jm be the weight of attribute m ∈ M returned by (2), according to the evaluation of expert j ∈ J;
  • w2js be the weight of attribute s ∈ S returned by (2), according to the evaluation of expert j ∈ J;
  • G ¯ 1 be the average weight of the methodological component;
  • G ¯ 2 be the average weight of the sustainability component;
  • w ¯ 1 m be the average weight of attribute m M;
  • w ¯ 2 s be the average weight of attribute s S;
  • V ¯ i m be the average mark of parameter iI for attribute mM;
  • V ¯ i s be the average mark of parameter iI for attribute sS;
  • Vijm be the mark of parameter iI for attribute mM according to the evaluation of expert jJ;
  • Vijs be the mark of parameter iI for attribute sS according to the evaluation of expert jJ.
The computation of SI is performed according to the following four steps algorithm.
For each parameter iI:
(1)
Compute G ¯ 1 and G ¯ 2 as follows:
G ¯ 1 = j = 1 J w 1 j J
G ¯ 2 = j = 1 J w 2 j J
(2)
Compute w ¯ 1 m and w ¯ 2 s as follows:
w ¯ 1 m = j = 1 J w 1 j m J m M
w ¯ 2 s = j = 1 J w 2 j s J s S
(2)
Compute V i m ¯ and V i s ¯ as follows:
V ¯ i m = j = 1 J V i j m J               m M                   i I
V ¯ i s = j = 1 J V i j s J                   s S                     i I
(4)
Compute SIi as follows:
S I i = G ¯ 1   ( m ϵ M w ¯ 1 m   V ¯ i m   ) + G ¯ 2   ( s ϵ S w ¯ 2 s   V ¯ i s )                 i I
According to step (6), KSPs are in decreasing order based on their estimated SIi. The first top KSPs are selected to be the most appropriate and coherent to measure the performance of e-PMVs.

4. Results

4.1. Preliminary Phase: The Long List of Parameters

According to Step (1) of phase A, Table 1 summarised the more comprehensive list of parameters to evaluate the performance of e-PMVs. Next, a grouping of similar sub-parameters was carried out, which were clustered based on the original key criteria. A total of 54 unique sub-parameters was considered, which was not derived from a specific source. More specific characteristics of sub-parameters have been inserted in the latest column of sub-sub-parameters reported in Appendix A. Next, components and attributes pointed out in Step (2) represented a data input in the selection process.

4.2. Participation Phase: The Survey

According to steps (3) and (4), a web-based survey among experts was carried out to obtain their judgements. The selection of experts considered the national scale of the research and the multi-perspective of the topic. Consequently, experts are Italian academics, practitioners, and aware e-PMV users. They were identified according to three sources. Academics were selected by Scopus for keywords (i.e., e-PMVs) and country. Thanks to the Google and LinkedIn search engines, practitioners were identified both in research and in their specific skills. Next, a random sampling criterion was followed. Aware e-PMVs users were selected through national associations (i.e., Club Monopattini Italiani and AIIT). A total of 103 experts was selected from January to February 2020.
The survey was developed as a web questionnaire through a free platform. Although several platforms for the survey planning and submission exist (e.g., Survio, Google form, Fyrebox, etc.), many have shortcomings in terms of functionalities, i.e., manage matrices and pairwise comparisons, unlimited program questions, set interfaces, and data export. According to the required functionalities, we adopted the “SondaggioOnline” platform. Indeed, the free-access platform enabled us to build comparisons in pairs, manage a number of questions, and export the data in excel in order to facilitate processing. However, the number of responses was limited in the free version (i.e., 350 responses in one month whereas the two questionnaires required 13 and 432 answers per expert, respectively), so a “personal” license was bought.
The survey was organised into two parts, which represented a wave of data collection. The first part of the survey was carried out between March and April 2020, and experts were required to evaluate each item according to an adjusted version of the Saaty’s Semantic Scale [47,48,49] on a nine-point scale (Table 4). An example of the first part of the survey was shown in Figure 2 for the evaluations of components, and the same logic was applied to the evaluation of the related attributes. Questions were formulated to collect data properly for the AHP. The first part was completed by 38.8% of the panel of experts.
The second part of the survey was carried out in one wave of data collection between March and April 2020. Experts were required to evaluate the long list of parameters correlated to each attribute of each component. The judgment was expressed through a value between 1 (the worst) and 10 (the best). An example of the second part of the survey was shown in Figure 3. The participation rate in the second part was 10.7% of the panel of experts.
A summary of the information about participation phases is reported in Table 5. Interestingly, practitioners actively participated in the first part of the survey, unlike the second part of parameters evaluations where academics were most numerous despite the low number.

4.3. Data Processing and Reporting: The Ranking of Parameters

According to Step (5) of the method, the AHP was applied to calculate the weights of components and related attributes, which summarised each expert’s preferences. The weights of each item were computed according to Equations (1) and (2), while consistency was evaluated by eqns. from (3) to (5). The weights were reported in an aggregate manner owing to the low number of experts interviewed. A synthesis of overall weights computed by AHP is shown in Table 6. It reports the standard deviation and the coefficient of variation. Table 6 is self-explanatory: the weights show the differences obtained from experts’ opinions with respect to the methodological and sustainability components and related attributes, respectively.
As shown in Table 6, experts gave a slightly higher relevance to the sustainability component (0.53) than the methodological one (0.47). Moreover, the quality of results is demonstrated in Table 6 by the low values returned by the coefficient of variation close to zero (0.253; 0.288).
On the one hand, no relevant difference was reported in the three attributes of the methodological component because the attributes reported similar weights (25%). However, the results of the experts’ judgment identified the ease of availability (26%) of parameters as the most relevant attribute to consider when evaluating the methodological component.
On the other hand, there was a difference in the weight between each attribute of the sustainability component. Practitioners and academics agreed on the primary relevance of the safety (28.2%) and environmental (26.8%) attributes. This reflects the previous literature results (i.e., Table 1), which are defined as primary categories of safety in terms of crash severity, road safety, conflicts on driving behaviour; meanwhile, the environmental facets include a sustainable modal shift and LCA. The interpretation of the resulting sustainability was very practical. Subsequently, less weight was attributed by experts to social (24.3%) and economic (20.7%) attributes. These results were partially expected for social instead of economic sustainability, usually very relevant for practitioners and particularly for public administrators.
Once the weights of components and related attributes were obtained, and marks were given to each parameter against each attribute, the SI was computed for each KSP by Equations (6) to (12). Next, according to Step (6) of the method, each KSP was ranked in decreasing order. Results are shown in Figure 4. It reports the list of top 15 KSPs that correspond to the first quartile of the rank-ordering distribution of all KSPs. A complete list of rank-ordering is reported in Appendix B.

5. Discussions

This cohesive method represents the first research attempt to identify and select the most promising KSPs regarding e-PMV performance. Consequently, these findings present opportunities and challenges for academics, practitioners, and public administrators: they can be used as a starting point to evaluate and implement existing strategies or address new ones capable of positively impacting the urban transport systems, based on the measurement of KSPs. However, the results obtained according to the three phases described in Section 4 deserve interesting considerations.
First, it is worth noting that the long list of KSPs (Appendix A) represents an original element of this study (phase A). Nevertheless, the construction of the long list of parameters using an indirect method (i.e., literature review) is a starting point for theoretical and applied research.
Second, Table 5 (phase B) provides the summary results of the participation rate in the survey, and it showed very different levels of response among experts in the two parts. There was a response of 53% of academics and 37% of practitioners and users in the first part. In the second part, the response rate of non-academics dropped by about 31% instead of 13% of academics. This drop can be explained by the different response times required in the two interview parts and which affects the performance of the web surveys. From about 10 min of the first, the second step of the questionnaire could take up to 60 min. Therefore, the level of participation by type of expert changes according to the time that can be spent on the research.
Third, Figure 4 (phase C) shows that all five key criteria are represented in this list by a different number of parameters. It is worth noting that just one economic parameter is included. This suggests a minor (and unexpected) attention to economic facets typical in transport investment. Perhaps, the little amount of money involved to acquire and manage e-PMVs might explain these results. Furthermore, the most promising set of KSPs has high relevance to urban and transport planning and safety. Urban and transport planning parameters are six of fifteen of the categories, and most focused on infrastructure elements such as charging stations, number of rentals per time slot, and the presence of priority lanes for e-PMVs on the road. There were five safety parameters that generally focused on traffic rules for speed and crashes, including the number of crashes and injuries.
Finally, to further investigate the relevance of the main parameters identified from the proposed cohesive method, we evaluated if the 15 top ranked KSPs are considered equally important in the literature. Consequently, we generate a new ranking of 15 top KSPs through a citation score, i.e., the number of occurrences (or repetitions) of a parameter in the literature considered (Table 1). Figure 5 shows the differences between the two different rankings. Specifically, the literature mainly utilised environmental parameters, unlike the most promising parameters of Urban and transport planning and safety retrieved from the cohesive method. Moreover, commonalities were also observed among the top-15 KSP lists: population density and distance from the city centre (Urban and transport planning), air quality (Environmental), time savings (Economic), km travelled (Social), and the number of injuries (Safety). However, the previous studies (see Table 1) included an average of 1–2 shared top KSPs, demonstrating the originality of the results obtained in this study. The partial exception is the study of Bai & Jiao [20], which have identified six of fifteen top sub-parameters belonging mainly to the key criteria of Urban and Transport planning. Nevertheless, this difference might be observed because many studies start from parameters already in use in current research. In contrast, the proposed method is an objective alternative that involves other subjects who operate with different skills than academics.

6. Conclusions

Owing to the recent invasion of electric-powered personal mobility vehicles (e-PMVs) in many cities worldwide, understanding how to evaluate and monitor their performance is crucial. Therefore, it is essential to identify key sustainable parameters (KSPs) to inform on the excellences and criticalities of e-PMVs. Although studies on e-PMVs are constantly growing, and this field of study is still experimental, previous research has focused largely on models and methods to measure and manage some KSPs. Conversely, it did not investigate objective methods for identifying and selecting the top KSPs.
To address these gaps, this study contributed to the growing literature on e-PMVs in a threefold manner:
  • Identification of a long (and to-date mostly complete) list of KSPs organised into key criteria, parameters and sub-parameters, which affect the performance of e-PMVs.
  • Proposal of a new cohesive approach that identified top KSPs from a long list and pointed out the most promising. More precisely, this approach applied a participatory approach and an objective method of weighting and ranking each KSP. The former approach used data collected by an Italian web survey involving academics, practitioners, and aware e-PMV users. The latter approach applied both an AHP, which processed data on the relevance of components and related attributes and a method that computed a score for each KSP. Hence, subjective data (i.e., judgments from experts) are managed to achieve objective conclusions (i.e., the score of each KSP).
  • Comparison of outcomes obtained the cohesive approach and by the number of occurrences of each parameter gathered from the literature. A set of six common KSPs was isolated.
  • The relevant implications of this study are:
  • The identification of the top KSPs may help stakeholders collect e-PMV data in detail and for benchmark purposes.
  • The high degree of applicability of the cohesive approach is not strictly linked to the KSPs of e-PMVs but can be generalised for other transportation modes.
  • The opportunity to assess e-PMVs among cities according to a common set of KSPs.
To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study that provided a set of KSPs to monitor the performances of e-PMVs according to an objective method.
To conclude, this study presents some shortcomings that raise issues for future research agendas.
First, the long list of KSPs was collected from an international literature review, but the selection of experts is national (Italian). Therefore, the study has a national viewpoint and is small in scale compared to the large number of cities characterised by the use of e-PMVs. Consequently, the study has not considered the possible tradeoff between the specificity of the local and general conditions or the comparability of the selected parameters. However, this limitation could influence the overall results and not the methodology, which is quite generalisable and driven by specific and well-recognised literature reviews. Indeed, the methodology presented here is flexible and applicable to any urban context. The panel of experts considered is decisive, as it is reasonable to think that each expert might provide an assessment that implicitly includes the country in which it operates. For instance, in Italy, where e-PMVs are an emerging transport mode, the most promising KSP obtained by the cohesive method is charging infrastructure; conversely, in countries where this transport mode is consolidated, it could have a different parameter ranking. Moreover, the heterogeneity of countries in their level of development may affect the input data of some parameters. For instance, the setting of a level of service of a spatial parameter (e.g., distance from the city centre) may change: developed countries might adopt a level of service stricter than the developing ones (e.g., 400 m vs. 800 m). However, these differences do not impede measuring the same KSP, even if the benchmark may be biased. Consequently, the long list constitutes an initial milestone, and future research should improve it through interviews with experts from many countries to effectively verify if and how local conditions could affect the choice of KSPs.
Second, the lower data of participation rate in the second part of the survey showed a shortcoming of the method: the outcome mark of each KSP against each attribute consists of a very large number of judgments (i.e., 432 values), which often frighten the expert. Indeed, it could represent an impediment to reaching a more shared evaluation. Despite the participation rate achieved from this study not being too different from web-based surveys [59], future perspectives may either broaden the sample of experts or carry out a Monte Carlo simulation on existing (and few) data. The application of a stochastic model could reduce or eliminate the bias of coverage of the small sample of experts and, consequently, their judgments [60].

Author Contributions

The authors confirm contribution to the paper as follow: study conception, all; methodology, B.B., E.C., R.C.; formal analysis, M.C, E.C., R.C.; writing—original draft preparation, E.C., R.C., S.B., M.C.; writing—review and editing, B.B., S.B., M.C.; supervision, B.B., G.M.; funding acquisition, B.B., G.M. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was partially funded by the University of Brescia, grant number “CUP: E81B19000840007” and POR FESR Lombardia 2014–2020 (project: MoSoRe).

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Some or all data, models, or code generated or used during the study are proprietary or confidential in nature and may only be provided with restrictions.

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to Michela Bonera for her constructive comments on an earlier draft of the manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Classification of parameters.
Table A1. Classification of parameters.
Key CriteriaParametersSub-ParametersSub-Sub-Parameters
EconomicUser costsTime savings-
Cost of travel-
EnvironmentalEnergy savingBattery capacity-
Urban transport choices-
Consumption of energy use-
Use of renewable energyRecharging
CO2 releaseFor transport from the manufacturers-
For materials and production processes-
Charging stations-
Per person/km-
Other emissionsAir quality-
Interchangeable battery use-
Life cycle assessment (LCA)-
e-PMV daily management-
Fuel consumption types-
The durability of functional safety systemsPersonal and System equipment
Noise pollution-
SafetyCrashesNumber of injuriesOrthopaedic
Polytrauma
Head lesions
Musculoskeletal system
Number of crashes-
Perception of safetyBy pedestrians-
By e-PMVs users-
Vehicle featuresOptional deviceAcoustic signaling
Warning lights and indicators of rear visibility
Steering capacity
Anti-tampering measures
Vehicle speed limitation (by design)
Combined anti-lock and brake
systems
Automatic lighting switching
Adaptation of the geofencing cycle infrastructure
Traffic rulesKnowledge of road regulations for e-PMVs-
Use of helmet
Users under alcoholic/drug effects
Irresponsible driving behaviour
Safety campaigns
Legal speed limits-
The speed limit for different areas (centre)-
Vehicle speed-
Use of personal protective equipment-
SocialImpact on people’s livesSocial equityGender, income, race, employment, education, etc.
Characteristics of the populationNumber of trips-
Type of service usersAverage age
Km travelled-
Travel time-
Breakdown by social classesUse associated with high occupancy rate areas
Urban and transport
planning
InfrastructureUser visibility at different speeds-
Paths reserved for e-PMVs-
Presence of shared paths on sidewalks-
Presence of priority lanes-
Charging infrastructure-
Park space conflict-
Road obstruction-
The infrastructure where e-PMVs are
allowed
-
Presence of shared paths with cyclists-
Number of rentals by time slots-
Transport impactsMobility improvement-
Modes of transport replaced with e-PMVs-
Efficient use of urban space-
User comfortMultimodality
AttractorsPark areas (allowed and not allowed)-
Proximity to shopping centres-
Proximity to schools-
Proximity to offices-
Distance from the city centre-
Use associated with institutional pole
areas
-
Urban centre featuresPopulation density-

Appendix B

Table A2. The overall ranking of sub-parameters.
Table A2. The overall ranking of sub-parameters.
N.Key CriteriaParametersSub-Parameters ClassificationSI
1Urban and transport planningInfrastructureCharging infrastructure8.18
2SafetyTraffic rulesVehicle speed8.04
3SafetyCrashesNumber of crashes7.86
4SafetyTraffic rulesLegal speed limits7.73
5Urban and transport planningUrban centre featuresPopulation density7.70
6SocialCharacteristics of the
population
Km travelled7.68
7SafetyTraffic rulesThe speed limit for different areas (centre)7.68
8EnvironmentalOther emissionsAir quality7.58
9EconomicUser costTime savings7.55
10EnvironmentalEnergy savingBattery capacity7.48
11Urban and transport planningInfrastructureNumber of rentals by time slots7.46
12SafetyCrashesNumber of injuries7.45
13Urban and transport planningAttractorsDistance from the city centre7.45
14Urban and transport planningInfrastructurePresence of priority lane7.41
15Urban and transport planningAttractorsProximity to schools7.40
16Urban and transport planningInfrastructureThe infrastructure where e-PMVs are allowed7.33
17Urban and transport planningAttractorsProximity to shopping centres7.29
18EnvironmentalEnergy savingUse of renewable energy7.25
19Urban and transport planningInfrastructurePaths reserved for e-PMVs7.23
20Urban and transport planningInfrastructureRoad obstruction7.23
21Urban and transport planningTransport impactsModes of transport replaced with
e-PMVs
7.22
22SocialCharacteristics of the
population
Number of trips7.18
23EnvironmentalOther emissionsLife cycle assessment (LCA)7.10
24SocialCharacteristics of the
population
Travel time7.02
25EnvironmentalOther emissionsNoise pollution7.01
26EnvironmentalCO2 releasePer person/km6.99
27Urban and transport planningInfrastructurePresence of shared paths with
cyclists
6.97
28Urban and transport planningInfrastructurePresence of shared paths on
sidewalks
6.96
29Urban and transport planningTransport impactsEfficient use of urban space6.94
30Urban and transport planningAttractorsProximity to offices6.94
31SafetyTraffic rulesUse of personal protective
equipment
6.92
32Urban and transport planningAttractorsPark areas (allowed and not allowed)6.91
33EnvironmentalOther emissionsInterchangeable battery use6.88
34EnvironmentalOther emissionsFuel consumption types6.87
35EnvironmentalEnergy savingConsumption of energy use6.85
36EnvironmentalOther emissionsThe durability of functional safety systems6.83
37SafetyTraffic rulesKnowledge of road regulations for e-PMVs6.79
38EnvironmentalEnergy savingUrban transport choices6.76
39Urban and transport planningInfrastructurePark space conflict6.70
40Urban and transport planningTransport impactsMobility improvement6.68
41SafetyVehicle featuresOptional device6.66
42EconomicUser costsCost of travel6.64
43EnvironmentalCO2 releaseMaterials and production processes6.64
44SocialImpact on people’s livesSocial equity6.64
45EnvironmentalOther emissionse-PMV daily management6.58
46Urban and transport planningTransport impactsUser comfort6.56
47SocialCharacteristics of the
population
Type of service users6.44
48EnvironmentalCO2 releaseCharging stations6.36
49SafetyPerception of safetyBy pedestrians6.35
50SafetyPerception of safetyBy e-PMVs users6.33
51EnvironmentalCO2 releaseFor transport from the
manufacturers
6.21
52Urban and transport planningInfrastructureUser visibility at different speeds6.15
53SocialCharacteristics of the
population
Breakdown by social classes5.74
54Urban and transport planningAttractorsUse associated with institutional pole areas5.40

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Figure 1. Conceptual model of the method.
Figure 1. Conceptual model of the method.
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Figure 2. Part 1. Example of the questionnaire for pairwise comparisons of components.
Figure 2. Part 1. Example of the questionnaire for pairwise comparisons of components.
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Figure 3. Part 2. Example of the questionnaire for the evaluation of the long list of KSPs.
Figure 3. Part 2. Example of the questionnaire for the evaluation of the long list of KSPs.
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Figure 4. The top KSPs.
Figure 4. The top KSPs.
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Figure 5. Comparison between the top 15 KSPs provided by 2 alternative methods.
Figure 5. Comparison between the top 15 KSPs provided by 2 alternative methods.
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Table 2. Numerical judgment of the pairwise comparison between items.
Table 2. Numerical judgment of the pairwise comparison between items.
12qn
11w1/w2w1/wqw1/wn
2w2/w11w2/wqw2/wn
pwp/w1wp/w2wp/wqwp/wn
1
nwn/w1wn/w2wn/wq1
Table 3. Random Consistency Index.
Table 3. Random Consistency Index.
n12345678910
RI000.520.891.111.251.351.401.451.49
Table 4. The adjusted AHP rating scale adapted from [12].
Table 4. The adjusted AHP rating scale adapted from [12].
Intensity of ImportanceDefinitionDescription
1Equal importanceThe two items that are compared are of equal importance
3Moderate importanceExperience and judgment moderately
favour one item over another
5Essential or strong
importance
Experience and judgment favour one item rather than another
7Very strong importanceExperience and judgment definitely favour one item over another
9Extreme importanceExperience and judgment definitely favour one item over another
2, 4, 6, 8Intermediate values
between the two adjacent
In some cases, experience and judgment could be better explained through
intermediate values
Table 5. Expert panel composition and participation rate in the web survey.
Table 5. Expert panel composition and participation rate in the web survey.
ExpertsInvolvedFirst PartSecond Part
Academics158 (53.3%)6 (40.0%)
Practitioners6925 (36.2%)4 (5.7%)
Users197 (36.8%)1 (5.2%)
Total10340 (38.8%)11 (10.6%)
Table 6. Overall weight for the three pairwise comparisons of the questionnaire.
Table 6. Overall weight for the three pairwise comparisons of the questionnaire.
Components/AttributesMean WeightStandard DeviationCoefficient of Variation
Sustainability component0.5300.1350.253
Safety0.2820.0260.094
Environmental0.2680.0230.088
Social0.2430.0260.107
Economic0.2070.0270.131
Methodological component0.4700.1350.288
Easy availability0.2600.0290.111
Measurability0.2500.0300.103
Speed availability0.2450.0330.151
Interpretability0.2450.0420.166
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Carrara, E.; Ciavarella, R.; Boglietti, S.; Carra, M.; Maternini, G.; Barabino, B. Identifying and Selecting Key Sustainable Parameters for the Monitoring of e-Powered Micro Personal Mobility Vehicles. Evidence from Italy. Sustainability 2021, 13, 9226. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su13169226

AMA Style

Carrara E, Ciavarella R, Boglietti S, Carra M, Maternini G, Barabino B. Identifying and Selecting Key Sustainable Parameters for the Monitoring of e-Powered Micro Personal Mobility Vehicles. Evidence from Italy. Sustainability. 2021; 13(16):9226. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su13169226

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Carrara, Elena, Rebecca Ciavarella, Stefania Boglietti, Martina Carra, Giulio Maternini, and Benedetto Barabino. 2021. "Identifying and Selecting Key Sustainable Parameters for the Monitoring of e-Powered Micro Personal Mobility Vehicles. Evidence from Italy" Sustainability 13, no. 16: 9226. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/su13169226

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