New Zealand Truck & Driver

Local testing for Mercedes eeconic

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MERCEDES-BENZ TRUCKS WILL BEGIN VALIDATION trials for the all-electric eeconic in Australia and New Zealand early next year.

It’s the second Australasi­an trial for a fully electric Mercedes-benz truck model following the August announceme­nt of similar evaluation pilot for the eactros.

As the designatio­n suggests, the eeconic is the battery electric variant of the Econic range, designed primarily for municipal roles.

Designed from the ground-up to work in densely populated areas, the Econic is known for its excellent visibility, practicali­ty, and active safety features. Adding to these characteri­stics, the eeconic will also produce zero local emissions and the powertrain will operate near-silently.

Three eeconic trucks will be part of a validation trial in Australia, and one is set to operate in New Zealand.

Production of the eeconic recently began at the Mercedes-benz Trucks factory in Worth, Germany.

Mercedes-benz Trucks Australia Pacific Director, Andrew Assimo, says the Econic makes a lot of sense as an electric vehicle.

“Waste collection represents the perfect applicatio­n for a near-silent electric truck that produces zero local emissions as these vehicles operate on the doorsteps of our community,” Mr Assimo says.

“We are excited to work with our Australian and New Zealand customers to validate the remarkable zero emission eeconic, which is also fully-loaded with the latest Mercedes-benz Trucks active safety technology,” he says.

The eeconic validation trial announceme­nt comes soon after Mercedesbe­nz Trucks confirmed it was also conducting a local validation trial of the eactros electric truck, with four units to operate in Australia and one running in New Zealand, with additional units to follow. The eactros is designed for short-haul distributi­on work.

The eeconic uses much the same electric drivetrain as the eactros. It has been designed to cover most typical waste collection routes operated by an Econic in a single shift without intermedia­ry charging.

The electric drivetrain enables a level cab floor to be used, allowing easy movement through the cab. This is particular­ly advantageo­us when the driver wishes to leave the vehicle through the folding door on the co-driver’s side, well out of the way of traffic.

The start of eeconic production represente­d another milestone on Daimler Truck’s path to Co2-neutral transport. In order to contribute to the decarbonis­ation of the commercial vehicle industry, the company is pursuing the goal of putting Co2-neutral transport on the roads by 2050.

The group therefore aims to sell only Co2-neutral vehicles in its biggest sales regions of North America, Europe and Japan from 2039 forward.

T&D

 ?? ?? Municipal roles such as refuse collection are seen as an ideal applicatio­n of new electric truck technology.
Municipal roles such as refuse collection are seen as an ideal applicatio­n of new electric truck technology.
 ?? ?? Validation trials for the all-electric eeconic in Australia and New Zealand start early next year.
Validation trials for the all-electric eeconic in Australia and New Zealand start early next year.
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