Waterloo Region Record

German post office is building an e-van

- Richard Weiss and Nicholas Brautlecht Bloomberg

The boxy, bare-bones van has no air conditioni­ng or radio, no passenger seat and a top speed of less than 80 kilometres per hour. Yet the electric vehicle’s success has irked the likes of Volkswagen.

When Deutsche Post couldn’t find a zero-emission delivery van that met its needs, it bought a startup and developed one. Now Europe’s largest postal service may start selling those vehicles — dubbed StreetScoo­ters — to others, showing the potential for disruption in the rapidly changing auto market.

“It’s a good example of a startup stimulatin­g competitio­n in the industry and putting pressure on the establishe­d manufactur­ers,” said Stefan Bratzel, director of the Center of Automotive Management at the University of Applied Sciences in Bergisch Gladbach, Germany. The true test for Deutsche Post’s foray into truck-making will come when VW and Renault respond in coming years with better offerings of their own, he said.

For now, Deutsche Post is in an enviable position, saying it breaks even on the venture after just 2,500 units.

That stands in contrast to carmakers from Tesla to General Motors, which lose money on electric cars despite government incentives.

The mail company plans to churn out 10,000 e-vans annually starting this year, which would make the StreetScoo­ter the No. 1 electrifie­d light commercial vehicle in Europe, overtaking Renault’s Kangoo, according to Ian Fletcher, an analyst at research company IHS Markit. The company can boost output to 15,000. Talks with potential customers from “numerous industries” in Germany and abroad are underway, with one client looking to buy a “very, very large number” of StreetScoo­ters, said management board member Juergen Gerdes. Deutsche Post will provide more details by early May, but early indication­s are the company has plans beyond mail delivery.

In September, the Bonn-based company displayed an orange version with an electro-hydraulic three-way dumper that might suit trash and constructi­on companies. It’s also working on a larger variant with more cargo room.

The vehicle, which carries Deutsche Post’s horn logo, is a symbol of the European car industry’s inability to come up with quick and cost-efficient solutions to lower emissions for the last-mile delivery market and municipal fleets. Cities from Paris to New Delhi to Stuttgart, home to Daimler and Porsche, are banning some diesel vehicles or taking other steps to cut emissions.

The mail company plans to electrify its global fleet of 92,000 vans and has already started switching away from diesel. It will roughly double its German StreetScoo­ter fleet to about 4,000 by year end, Gerdes said. As battery capabiliti­es improve, the postal company wants to deploy the van in rural areas as well. It can travel some 80 kilometres on a charge, about half that of a Renault Kangoo van.

While the van is a niche product, tailormade to help Deutsche Post jostle for share in the $76-billion US global last-mile delivery market, demand may grow. Parcel volumes in countries including Germany and the U.S. are set to double over the next 10 years, according to McKinsey & Co.

Atlanta-based rival UPS has taken a different tack, choosing to retrofit its trademark brown vans in Europe by replacing diesel engines with batteries, a slow process.

When purchasing and operating costs are taken into account, Deutsche Post has come out ahead on the StreetScoo­ters, said CEO Frank Appel. Overall, maintenanc­e costs for e-vehicles are about 35 per cent less than for cars with internal-combustion engines, the German IFA automotive industry institute estimated.

“It’s extremely annoying to me,” Volkswagen CEO Matthias Mueller said last August when asked about the StreetScoo­ter. “I am asking myself why Deutsche Post didn’t work with us on this,” he said, adding that VW will still try to “get a foot in the door.”

 ?? COURTESY OF STREETSCOO­TER ?? Deutsche Post has a fleet of 2,500 StreetScoo­ter electric delivery vans.
COURTESY OF STREETSCOO­TER Deutsche Post has a fleet of 2,500 StreetScoo­ter electric delivery vans.

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