Using MOT test data to analyse travel behaviour change: part 1- scoping study
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Description
In 2005, the Vehicle and Operator Services Agency (VOSA) introduced a computerised system for reporting MOT (roadworthiness) test results. Since that time, the results of approximately 35,000,000 MOT tests annually have been collected and stored in a Department for Transport (DfT) database. The DfT business plan , published 8 November 2010, promised to make available the "detailed VOSA MOT data" - and on 24 November, comprehensive data was released - consisting of the results of 150,000,000 MOT tests from 2005 to the spring of 2010. Some fields, such as vehicle registration plates and unique VTS (vehicle test station) identities have been withheld from the published data in order to preserve anonymity. However, what remains still contains a wealth of information that is not available in any other data set.
In addition to the results of the MOT test itself (including detailed reasons for failure), the data include:
- the vehicle odometer (mileage) reading
- the vehicle manufacturer, type and engine capacity
- the vehicle's year of first use
- the top-level postal area (letters only from the postcode) of the VTS
Our initial objective is to use the vehicle odometer readings - which are not available in any other (large scale) data set - combined with the data about vehicle type, to analyse how patterns of vehicle usage (and associated carbon footprint) have changed with time, disaggregated over different regions of the country. The project will therefore aim:
- to develop software tools for the analysis of the MOT data;
- to work with the DfT and VOSA on maximizing the use that can be made of the MOT data set whilst respecting issues such as data protection;
- to scope the application of MOT odometer readings and the possibilities for triangulating with other data sets (such as vehicle emissions, new vehicle registrations and Census data);
- to develop one (or two) small-scale demonstrations illustrating potential applications of our approach.
The ultimate aim, going beyond the scoping study, is to create a publicly available tool that all those undertaking travel behavior change initiatives could use to assess the impacts of their work on car ownership, use and related carbon emissions, thereby dramatically reducing the need for every individual project to commission surveys or other forms of travel behavior measurement. Further research could also include specific analyses of: changes in car ownership and use that have occurred in the Sustainable Travel and Cycling Demonstration Towns; the nature of the distribution and diffusion of electric, hybrid and other alternative-technology vehicles; the location and concentration of 'dirty' vehicle use with implications for the targeting of climate change and air quality initiatives; and the relationship between car use and physical activity.
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Potential Impact:
The key immediate impacts from the project will be:
- To develop collaborative relationships with DfT and VOSA, in order to understand the potential value of the data set, and the wide range of uses that it could be put to and to feed into their existing work on potential users and applications of the dataset.
- To develop a more detailed research specification for a follow-on project for making use of the data (in a number of potential forms).
- To input into existing discussions around the evaluation of travel behaviour.
There are key communities who could benefit greatly from products and tools ultimately derived from the MOT data set, particularly in the fields of transport, climate change, energy and air pollution. The project team have considerable experience in these fields, and can identify a wide range of purposes for which the dataset could be used. This initial project will help to clarify the nature and quality of the data set, and the different forms in which it could be possible to use it for research purposes or as an input into a wider set of publicly available tools. Having explored its potential, the project team will be able to use existing networks to identify particular uses and needs for the data and develop a future research specification for a more advanced project. At best, this would include finding ways to link the MOT data with the huge amount of other socio-economic data available on a spatial basis, as well as spatial data on particular issues such as physical activity, air pollution (emissions and concentrations) and domestic energy use. Principle beneficiaries are likely to be policy makers in local and national Government and other researchers, though there could also be particular insights that are of relevance to business, and to third sector organisations (such as charities that work in the relevant policy areas).
Transport Research Laboratory Ltd | LEAD_ORG |
Department for Transport | COLLAB_ORG |
Sally Cairns | PI_PER |
Tim Chatterton | COI_PER |
Jillian Anable | COI_PER |
Richard Wilson | COI_PER |
Subjects by relevance
- Emissions
- Climate changes
- Traffic
- Air pollution
- Illustrated works
- Environmental effects
- Computerisation
Extracted key phrases
- Mot test datum
- Vehicle use
- Car use
- Domestic energy use
- Particular use
- MOT datum
- Datum set
- Economic datum available
- Vehicle test station
- MOT test
- Spatial datum
- Comprehensive datum
- Census datum
- Travel behaviour change
- Test result