San Francisco Chronicle

States adopt goals for electric trucks

- By Mary Esch Mary Esch is an Associated Press writer.

A coalition of states is following California’s lead in setting goals to jumpstart a transition to electricpo­wered trucks, vans and buses in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve air quality for communitie­s choked by diesel fumes.

The 15 states, plus the District of Columbia, announced this month that they’ve agreed to develop an action plan aimed at having 100% of all new medium and heavyduty vehicles sold be zeroemissi­on by 2050, with an interim target of 30% zeroemissi­on vehicle sales by 2030.

“This is a really big deal in sending a powerful signal to industry with directions on where we need to be going with transporta­tion,” said Bill Van Amburg, executive vice president of Calstart, a Pasadena nonprofit consortium focused on building a clean transporta­tion industry. “You can now justify further investment to develop more products.”

Details are yet to be worked out. One option would be to adopt the mandate California’s Air Resources Board announced in June requiring that all new commercial trucks and vans purchased must be zeroemissi­on by 2045, with milestones along the way. Or the states could focus more on subsidies and incentives, as well as investment in charging infrastruc­ture.

“This memorandum of understand­ing magnifies what California did in adopting its regulation,” said Paul Cort, an attorney for the environmen­tal group Earthjusti­ce. “It tells manufactur­ers that they not only have to produce these trucks for California but also for these other states,” which represent the market for 40% of truck sales.

The states that signed the agreement are California, Connecticu­t, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington. The group had already committed to an action plan to foster electrific­ation of passenger vehicles.

“The important step will be the details that emerge from this agreement,” said Jimmy O’Dea, a vehicles analyst at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “The direction the states need to go should be in response to the urgency of the situation, both on air quality and climate change.”

There are about 28 million trucks and buses — about 10% of all vehicles — in the United States, according to a 2019 report authored by O’Dea. They account for 28% of total carbon emissions in the transporta­tion sector.

Truck and engine manufactur­ers, oil companies, and farming and other industries opposed California’s mandate, saying it was expensive and unrealisti­c. Jed Mandel, president of the Truck and Engine Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, said the California rule would “collapse” for lack of charging infrastruc­ture.

Van Amburg said growth of the industry could be fasttracke­d by federal incentives to support charging infrastruc­ture and purchases of zeroemissi­on trucks.

In New York, a package of clean transporta­tion initiative­s announced by Gov. Andrew Cuomo includes a utilityfun­ded program to deploy more than 50,000 charging stations by 2025. There’s also an allocation of nearly $50 million from the Volkswagen diesel emissions settlement to boost the use of electric transit and school buses and expand charging infrastruc­ture.

The U.S. and Canada are on track to have 169 models of zeroemissi­on commercial vehicles available for purchase by the end of 2020, compared to 95 models in 2019, according to projection­s from Calstart’s ZeroEmissi­on Technology Inventory, launched in March.

The fastestgro­wing segments are transit buses and urban delivery trucks that have known routes and the ability to recharge at depots overnight. Amazon, IKEA, FedEx and UPS have made commitment­s and investment­s in manufactur­ers of zeroemissi­on commercial vehicle companies such as Rivian, Arriva and Chanje in recent months.

It will take longer for zeroemissi­ons technology to meet the distance and payload capacities needed by heavyduty trucking fleets, said Benjamin Mandel, Calstart’s Northeast regional director. Daimler, Tesla, Volvo and China’s BYD are among the manufactur­ers working on electric big rigs.

 ?? David Goldman / Associated Press 2010 ?? Bill Simpson, a FritoLay employee, charges one of five allelectri­c delivery trucks in use in 2010 for deliveries in New York City.
David Goldman / Associated Press 2010 Bill Simpson, a FritoLay employee, charges one of five allelectri­c delivery trucks in use in 2010 for deliveries in New York City.

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