Business World

Special delivery: Automakers make plug for electric vans

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TOKYO — In the rush towards electric vehicles (EVs), automakers are increasing­ly sparing a thought for the humble delivery van, an often overlooked segment with big growth potential given tightening pollution restrictio­ns in urban areas.

Given lingering consumer concerns about cost and charging infrastruc­ture, many in the industry expect it will take at least a decade for EVs to win over mainstream car owners.

But as e-commerce begins to dominate the retail sector and cities clamp down on pollution, more vehicle makers see opportunit­ies for faster take-up of EVs as delivery vehicles, taxis and other business uses in dense, urban areas.

At the Tokyo Motor Show which opened to the public on Friday, Nissan Motor Co., an early embracer of EV technology and maker of the Leaf, the world’s topselling electric car, unveiled a concept model of its e-NV200 electric van with refrigerat­ion capabiliti­es, designed to transport chilled food to restaurant­s and homes.

“Imagine if you have city access challenges, how will you get food delivered to restaurant­s, and goods to customers?” said Ashwani Gupta, head of the light commercial business at the automaking alliance of Nissan and France’s Renault SA.

“There’s no other option but to go electric.”

Nissan plans to launch the refrigerat­ion model in Japan next year, Gupta said. Both Nissan and Renault already market electric vans in Europe.

Nissan is also looking to introduce the e-NV200 series in China in the near term as it expects demand will “explode” as big cities in the country effectivel­y ban gasoline and diesel trucks and vans in an effort to crack down on emissions.

At the moment, the country’s electric light commercial vehicle market has yet to be tapped by major foreign automakers, although Ford Motor Co. wants to drive its truck-making China partner Jiangling Motors Corp. ( JMC) more towards electric commercial vans.

Mitsubishi Fuso Truck and Bus Corp., majority owned by Germany’s Daimler AG, has also begun selling its eCanter electric light- duty truck in the United States, Europe and Japan, where it targets transport delivery services and convenient stores.

As increases in demand for e-commerce creates more work for delivery services, Toyota Auto Body, a wholly owned subsidiary of Toyota Motor Corp., was thinking about the harried delivery van driver when it designed its LCV D-Cargo concept model.

“We set out to make the delivery truck more comfortabl­e for drivers,” said Ichiro Mukai, who worked on the model’s design.

“In the past home deliveries mainly centered around larger parcels, but recently, a big increase in the number of deliveries has come just as people are getting smaller parcels delivered,” he said, adding that this had increased the workload of drivers.

The model’s futuristic design is based on Toyota’s gasolinehy­brid minivan models marketed in Japan, and can be adapted to operate as an all-battery electric.

Removing the passenger seat entirely, the driver’s seat configurat­ion — which includes a retractabl­e steering wheel and rounded seat corners — is designed to enable drivers to get in and out of the vehicle more quickly and easily.

A removable tablet device in the center of the steering wheel enables drivers to easily locate parcels in the hold, where track shelving units and a wider door opening allows for easy access to parcels from outside the vehicle. —

 ??  ?? A MAN looks at Nissan Motor Co.’s concept model of its e-NV200 electric van at the 45th Tokyo Motor Show in Tokyo, Japan, Oct. 27.
A MAN looks at Nissan Motor Co.’s concept model of its e-NV200 electric van at the 45th Tokyo Motor Show in Tokyo, Japan, Oct. 27.

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