San Francisco Chronicle

Self-driving cars to get a solar boost

S.F.’s Cruise to source power from Central Valley farms

- By J.D. Morris

“We’re always looking for opportunit­ies to reduce our carbon footprint.”

Sean Stockton, Sundale president

Cruise, the San Francisco autonomous car company backed by General Motors, is launching a new initiative to support renewable energy efforts in the Central Valley.

Through a program called Farm to Fleet, Cruise will source solar power for its all-electric fleet from two farms: Sundale Vineyards outside Tulare and Moonlight Companies in Reedley (Fresno County).

Sundale Vineyards grows table grapes, and Moonlight is a citrus and stone fruit grower. Both of them also have solar panel installati­ons — and they’ll now support Cruise as it tries to expand the number of electric cars on the road in California.

Executives at the self-driving car company say paying the farms for solar power is intended to further the state’s progress in fighting climate change while providing a benefit to communitie­s that likely won’t have a massive number of electric or autonomous cars anytime soon.

“We’re tying urban issues and rural issues together in a way that, I think, benefits everybody,” said Rob Grant, Cruise’s vice president

of social affairs and global impact. “We looked intentiona­lly at where we can make this connection in parts of California that are not normally thought of as a hotbed for autonomous vehicles and electric vehicles.”

Cruise’s self-driving cars aren’t coming to the Central Valley immediatel­y. The company is developing a ride-hailing service in San Francisco, where its cars are being tested on the city’s streets — both with and without drivers. Cruise has also partnered with the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank to deliver meals since the pandemic took hold last year.

When the company’s cars are charged in San Francisco, they get the same electricit­y from the same grid as everyone else. But Cruise is paying undisclose­d sums to Sundale and Moonlight in exchange for renewable energy credits that correspond to the same amount of power Cruise uses from the grid.

The credits are a kind of financial certificat­e that California businesses can buy and sell to track their clean power goals. All of Cruise’s credits will now come from Sundale and Moonlight.

“We’re always looking for opportunit­ies to reduce our carbon footprint,” said Sean Stockton, Sundale’s president. “This one just seemed like a natural fit, to take advantage of the metro areas’ uses of electric vehicles, and something we could do.”

A report on the Central Valley solar initiative authored by Cruise and experts at BTR Energy, which works to integrate electric cars with traditiona­l electricit­y markets, expresses hope that the partnershi­p between Cruise and the farms can sets an example for other businesses. Their aim is to see much wider use of electric cars in the ride-hailing industry.

It’s an important subject in California energy and climate policy. While the state’s highly regulated electric power sector has made a lot of progress on reducing its carbon emissions, thanks to mandates requiring utilities to buy more renewable energy, the transporta­tion sector still has a long way to go.

The report projects that, under the rosiest scenarios, making the ride-hailing sector allelectri­c could by 2040 help California avoid up to 13.5 million metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions per year, which the report says would be akin to taking 2.9 million gas-powered cars off the road. Gov. Gavin Newsom has already moved to end the sale of gas cars in the state by 2035.

The authors believe that partnershi­ps like the one Cruise has establishe­d should take off as the state tries to reduce its transporta­tion emissions.

“We believe that disparate industries — in this case, transporta­tion and agricultur­e — can have a greater impact when working together to solve the climate crisis,” said Jack Barrow, CEO of BTR Energy. “These types of initiative­s can illustrate to other communitie­s how transporta­tion electrific­ation can benefit them and how it can be part of a solution to climate change.”

 ?? Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? Solar panels at Sundale Vineyards in Tulare, which is partnering with self-driving car company Cruise.
Photos by Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle Solar panels at Sundale Vineyards in Tulare, which is partnering with self-driving car company Cruise.
 ??  ?? Sundale Vineyards owner and CEO Todd Kinosian inspects grapes. The partnershi­p with Cruise is intended to benefit rural communitie­s.
Sundale Vineyards owner and CEO Todd Kinosian inspects grapes. The partnershi­p with Cruise is intended to benefit rural communitie­s.
 ?? Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle ?? Packaged grapes wait to be loaded onto trucks at Sundale Vineyards in Tulare. The company is partnering with S.F.’s Cruise to solar-power self-driving cars.
Scott Strazzante / The Chronicle Packaged grapes wait to be loaded onto trucks at Sundale Vineyards in Tulare. The company is partnering with S.F.’s Cruise to solar-power self-driving cars.

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