The Boston Globe

Boston to get $20m for 50 new electric school buses

- Sabrina Shankman can be reached at sabrina.shankman@ globe.com By Sabrina Shankman GLOBE STAFF

Each school day, 640 yellow school buses chug through Boston’s neighborho­ods shuttling students to and from class. The majority of the buses run on diesel, spewing pollutants that are bad for the planet and for human health.

On Monday, the Biden Administra­tion announced a plan to hasten their demise — $1 billion for new electric school buses nationwide, including $20 million in grant money for 50 new ones in Boston, plus the infrastruc­ture to support them.

Those electric buses, which are expected to be road-ready by the summer of 2025, will join 20 other EV buses that are already in use in Boston and another 19 that have been ordered and should arrive this school year. It’s all part of the effort to green the school department’s bus fleet to be totally electric by 2030.

“This unpreceden­ted federal investment will mean healthier commutes for our students and bus drivers, cleaner air in our neighborho­ods, and a giant step in our transition to a greener and climate-ready city,” said Mayor Michelle Wu.

Three other Massachuse­tts communitie­s won grants as well. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Clean School Bus Program Grants Competitio­n will award funds for 10 new electric buses in Fall River and New Bedford and 15 in Worcester. Nationally, the EPA is supporting 67 applicants.

“Electric school buses are bright yellow symbols of how Massachuse­tts is tackling the climate crisis,” Senator Elizabeth Warren said in an interview with the Globe. “It’s a win-win-winwin — just keep checking off the categories — because it is about kids’ health, about clean communitie­s, about equity in communitie­s that too often have borne the brunt of environmen­tal challenges, and about cost.”

That’s why the Biden administra­tion has made converting school bus fleets a central part of its climate effort. Electrifyi­ng the full US school bus fleet by 2030 — powered by renewable energy — would eliminate the same amount of greenhouse gasses as removing 2 million cars from the road, according to the Electric School Bus Initiative, a project of the World Resources Institute aimed at transition­ing the US school bus fleet.

Not to mention the health benefits. Nationally, exposure to diesel pollution from transporta­tion sources contribute­s to 3,700 heart attacks, 8,800 deaths, and $100 billion in health damages each year, according to the EPA. Diesel pollution has also been linked to cancer in humans and can be especially harmful to children with asthma.

Electric battery buses have no tailpipe emissions. While charging the battery requires energy, if the electricit­y is generated from renewable sources like solar or wind, electric vehicles produce virtually no air pollution.

For Boston, a crucial aspect of the grant is that it provides not just the buses but the charging infrastruc­ture too, said interim director of transporta­tion for Boston Public Schools, Jacqueline Hayes. It takes a lot to charge hundreds of buses — not just the individual chargers but also the wires and infrastruc­ture to handle a major strain on the system.

Since 2021, the city has been partnering with Eversource to build out capacity at one of its bus yards and has the infrastruc­ture in place. Some of the new grant money will support upgrades at a second Boston bus yard. Ultimately, Hayes said the school department aims to have batteries on hand, too, “so we’re not charging 700 buses all at once across three yards, but rather charging batteries throughout the day.”

But for now, it’s all about the basics — having sufficient chargers and ironing out the kinks to transition from fossil fuel to electric buses. And teaching drivers how to maneuver the all-electric powertrain.

The first 20 electric school buses in Boston have helped with those lessons, Hayes said. Drivers have been trained on regenerati­ve breaking (the time between when a driver stops accelerati­ng and when they hit the brakes, which provides charge to an electric engine), understand­ing how extreme cold or heat affects function, and learning things like how to handle the increased weight of an electric bus when navigating hills.

While advocates and political leaders cheered the news Monday, Anna Vanderspek, who leads the electric vehicle program at the Green Energy Consumers Alliance, said that more money is needed.

“It is a lot of funding — but it’s a lot of funding spread over the entire country,” she said.

But, she said, the state and utilities are stepping in to fill gaps. A program through the Massachuse­tts Clean Energy Center is providing grant funding for electric infrastruc­ture and buses. An Eversource program to help provide funds for charging heavy duty vehicles like school buses is already totally subscribed, but National Grid has a program that can cover charging infrastruc­ture upgrades.

 ?? CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF/FILE ?? The 50 new electric school buses are expected to be in use in the city by the summer of 2025.
CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF/FILE The 50 new electric school buses are expected to be in use in the city by the summer of 2025.

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