Los Angeles Times

U.S. approves push for more electric rigs

California may widen zero-emissions rule to include heavy-duty vehicles sold in state.

- BY ROB NIKOLEWSKI Nikolewski writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — When people think of electric vehicles, they typically think of passenger cars, not commercial trucks or vans. But the volume of medium- and heavy-duty EVs is growing, and recent decisions by federal and California regulators are sure to increase their numbers.

“I would say roughly 30% to 40% of our business this year will be battery electric,” said Andrew Freer, commercial vehicle sales manager for Creative Bus Sales, who on Thursday showed off the Ford E-Transit, an all-electric van, at San Diego’s annual EV Fleet Day.

A couple of years ago, Freer said, just 5% of his company’s business was in the EV space. “We’re making a big push with this now,” he said.

So are the state of California and the Biden administra­tion.

While many are familiar with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s executive order that bans the sale of new gasolinepo­wered passenger cars by 2035, officials have also created mandates to clean up the fleet of big rigs rumbling along the state’s streets and freeways.

The White House cleared the way March 31 for the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to allow California to impose strict zero-emissions requiremen­ts on heavy-duty vehicles sold in the state.

The EPA approved two Clean Air Act waivers for California, including the Advanced Clean Trucks rule, which requires all mediumand heavy-duty vehicles to emit zero emissions by 2045, where feasible. By 2035, truck manufactur­ers must increase sales of new zeroemissi­on Class 2b-3 trucks to 55%, Class 4-8 trucks to 75% and 40% for new semitracto­rs.

The new standards will start to increase next year. Massachuse­tts, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Washington and Vermont are expected to follow suit. Combined with California, those states represent about 22% of the national truck market.

And later this month, the California Air Resources Board is expected to pass a similar set of rules for fleet owners, mandating that an increasing number of purchases of new commercial trucks, vans, buses and rigs be zero emissions. If passed, minimum 10% quotas will begin as early as 2025 and incrementa­lly increase to 100% as early as 2035.

“There’s no question that momentum is accelerati­ng rapidly in the commercial electric vehicle market,” said Lawren Markle, senior manager at GNA, a Santa Monica clean transporta­tion and energy consultanc­y. “We think this is a year where there will be a tipping point.”

Nearly 20 commercial EVs were on display on Broadway Pier in San Diego, including the 82,000-pound Volvo VNR-E 300, a Class 8 behemoth that costs “around $450,000,” said Melanie Des Laurier, salesperso­n for TEC Equipment, a truck and trailer dealership in La Mirada.

By comparison, diesel trucks of that size cost about $180,000 to $200,000. “But there’s lots of grants out there to help you get into one,” Des Laurier said.

Jason Chambers, regional sales manager for Workhorse, a company that manufactur­es electric-only commercial vehicles, displayed the W4 CC model, a Class 4 work truck with variable cargo space. Fully loaded with drawers and cabinets that fold out and a ladder rack for tools and equipment, the $215,000 EV is targeted at electric companies and municipal fleets for users such as water and parks and recreation department­s.

Reaching the 100% target “is doable, especially for Workhorse,” Chambers said. “We have the manufactur­ing facility up and running [in Indiana]. We have vehicles available today, on the ground and ready to go.”

The new rules have not drawn cheers from everyone. The trucking industry’s biggest trade group criticized the EPA decision.

“By granting California’s waiver for its so-called advanced clean trucks rule, the EPA is handing over the keys as a national regulator,” American Trucking Assn. Chief Executive Chris Spear said. “This isn’t the United States of California, and in order to mollify a never satisfied fringe environmen­tal lobby by allowing the state to proceed with these technologi­cally infeasible rules on unworkable and unrealisti­c timelines, the EPA is sowing the ground for a future supply chain crisis.”

Although nearly 19% of cars sold in California last year were zero-emission vehicles, fewer than 2% of all heavy-duty trucks were electric, according to the Commercial Carrier Journal, a trucking industry publicatio­n.

“With all of these added costs into the transporta­tion and distributi­on sector, whether it’s a small retail shop or a Walmart or Target, it’s going to cost more to ship goods in California,” said Wayne Winegarden, a senior fellow at the Pacific Research Institute, which advocates for free-market solutions to policy issues. “If it costs more to ship goods and if everybody has those costs, it’s very likely that those costs will be shifted onto consumers.”

The day the waivers were issued, Newsom called them “a big deal for climate action” and said California is “leading the charge to get dirty trucks and buses — the most polluting vehicles — off our streets, and other states and countries are lining up to follow our lead.”

As for concerns about feasibilit­y and costs, Air Resources Board spokesman Alberto Larios said Newsom and the state Legislatur­e have made $5 billion available to make the transition to cleaner trucks and buses, which includes incentives for fleet owners.

“Manufactur­ers are making major investment­s today to increase production of needed materials for zeroemissi­on vehicles and develop domestic supply chains,” Larios said in an email.

Standing in front of the Class 8 Freightlin­er eCascadia semi that goes 230 miles on a full charge, Alexander Voets of Velocity Vehicle Group in Whittier said the best use of electric big rigs is for shorter, regional deliveries — not for longhaul trips of, say, 500 miles, because the electric vehicle charging system is not yet sufficient­ly built out.

“This would usually be a vehicle that goes about 200 miles or so in a day in a typical duty cycle — think about your dedicated and repeatable routes,” Voets said. “That’s the prime applicatio­n for battery electric trucks at the moment.”

Will the zero-emission transition for big commercial vehicles pan out?

“I think it’s going to work, it’s just a question of time,” Voets said. “It may not work as fast as people expect but two things need to happen. ... One thing is faster charging speeds. Right now it takes multiple hours to charge them. We need to get to under an hour. Then, we need public charging infrastruc­ture that takes out all the upfront headaches out of the fleets and essentiall­y provides electric gas stations” up and down roads and highways.

The Air Resources Board’s decision on its draft Advanced Clean Fleets rule is scheduled for April 27 or 28.

 ?? ROB NIKOLEWSKI San Diego Union-Tribune ?? CALIFORNIA HAS received the U.S. EPA’s approval to increase emissions standards for big rigs starting next year. Above, the Class 8 Freightlin­er eCascadia semi, which can go 230 miles on a full charge.
ROB NIKOLEWSKI San Diego Union-Tribune CALIFORNIA HAS received the U.S. EPA’s approval to increase emissions standards for big rigs starting next year. Above, the Class 8 Freightlin­er eCascadia semi, which can go 230 miles on a full charge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States