German post office delivers e-car surprise
FRANKFURT AM MAIN: On German streets plied by hulking SUVs and roaring combustion engines, the small, toy-like electric vehicles driven by postmen stand out by their silence and their bright yellow livery.
But even more surprising to many in the car-loving nation is the Deutsche Post horn logo on the prows of the so- called “Streetscooters” -- vans that are not much bigger than the iconic Volkswagen Golf.
To some analysts, the former state- owned logistics fi rm is showing up auto industry giants like Volkswagen, BMW or Daimler by shifting gears towards vehicle electrification even faster.
More than 6,000 Streetscooters number among the 49,300 vehicles Deutsche Post uses for local deliveries, and the company recently opened a second factory to up production to 40 per day.
When the traditional carmakers were slow to respond to its search for a low- carbon, low- cost van, bosses snapped up a small start-up fi rm to build its own.
Industry expert Ferdinand Dudenhoeffer of the Center for Automotive Research calls the move “a starting gun” for electric mobility in Germany, where headlines are more often dominated by a seemingly endless diesel emissions scandal.
For 20-year veteran of the Frankfurt post office Miroslav Arapovic, the new vehicle just means he is “less noisy and better integrated into the environment” as he makes his rounds.
“I’ve already had compliments from passers-by, like for the fact there aren’t any oil marks” on the street, he says.
Deutsche Post designed its Streetscooter from scratch as a delivery vehicle for inner cities.
Its battery offers a range of just 80 kilometres ( 50 miles), massively slashing the costs of production.
Given such “very specific” requirements it was unsurprising that the major manufacturers focused on massmarket models were unable to rise to the challenge, explains Stefan Reindl, director of the Institute for the Automobile Economy ( IFA).
Firms like Volkswagen have inflexible production chains, discouraging them from producing at small scale, and they “tend to over- engineer” vehicles rather than pursuing minimalism.
For its part, Deutsche Post “does not want to become a carmaker”, seeking only to optimise the “last kilometre” of its deliveries, Streetscooter chief Achim Kampker says.
The “last mile”, a term adopted from the telecoms industry, is a top question for delivery fi rms, city authorities and environmentalists, especially in crowded, polluted German city centres.
It refers to the question of how to efficiently move goods from central hubs on to their fi nal destination in densely populated urban areas.
Numbers of delivery vehicles making the rounds have ballooned, as booming e- commerce sets ever-more packages on their way to households’ front doors.
A British study found in 2017 that light van traffic in London had increased 30 percent over 1993 levels, unlike car and taxi traffic which has been sinking since the early 2000s.
Meanwhile, German cities are scrambling to clean up their air after a court decision ruled that diesel vehicles could be banned as a measure of last resort.
Hamburg and Stuttgart are among the fi rst local authorities to shut off parts of their territory to older cars powered by the fuel.
Despite Kampker’s claims of limited ambitions, Streetscooter has gradually become a key player in this growing market, offering its product to outside customers for the past year at a cost of around 40,000 euros ( RM185,600) each.
Streetscooter is also working on a larger, more powerful model with US-based Ford, which will supply the new van’s chassis.
Deutsche Post CEO Frank Appel said in June that he aims to keep Streetscooter within the group “at least for the next two years”. — AFP
I’ve already had compliments from passers-by, like for the fact there aren’t any oil marks” on the street.
Miroslav Arapovic, Frankfurt post office worker