Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Ford’s electric bakkie can power your house for 10 days

-

SPEND an afternoon driving the Ford F-150 Lightning around the vineyards and redwood-shaded back roads of California wine country and the pick-up’s considerab­le power is apparent.

What makes the electric version of America’s best-selling vehicle a potential game-changer, though, is not its accelerati­on (zero to 95km per hour in 4,3 seconds) or its range (up to 500km on a charge). Rather it’s the technology that taps the Lightning’s battery pack to power your home or the electric grid itself during increasing­ly frequent climate-driven blackouts.

The extended-range Lightning’s 131 kilowatt-hour lithium-ion pack boasts almost 10 times the capacity of a Tesla Powerwall, an US$11 000 (R172 000) 00) home backup battery that can’t be driven n to the supermarke­t. The Lightning is “a mini powerplant for your home,” says Jason Glickman, executive vice president for or engineerin­g, planning and strategy at California utility PG&E Corp.

“It can support the grid on a hot summer day, when we have demand spiking.”

“At scale, when these vehicles are enabled to send energy back to the grid, flex alerts and notices of grid emergencie­s will be a thing completely of the past,” adds Glickman, whose utility is testing how to integrate the truck into its management of the grid.

He’s speaking from the tailgate of a Lightning, one of three parked on a hill overlookin­g vineyards at Dutton Ranch in Sebastopol, along with a top Ford executive and the president of Sonoma County Winegrower­s, an associatio­n of 1 800 farmers that promotes sustainabl­e agricultur­e.

Ford staged the event earlier this month to showcase a pilot program that’s supplying Dutton Ranch and two other local farms with electric pickups and vans as part of a service called Ford Pro that helps businesses manage their vehicle fleets.

The Lightning is the first EV sold in the US with bi-directiona­l charging capability enabled to supply electricit­y back to homes and the grid. On this day, Ford had not yet handed over electric trucks to the grape growers — it has a backlog of some 200 000 orders. (A week later, the company delivered the first Lightning to a customer in Michigan.) But the family-owned farms’ embrace of this 21st century rural electrific­ation initiative indicates the prospects for transformi­ng battery-powered pick-ups into vehicles to decarbonis­e the economy and build resilience against climate change.

Sonoma County Winegrower­s president Karissa Kruse, speaking over a sound system plugged into a Lightning, says that at first, “growers were skeptical and there wasn’t a lot of enthusiasm for going electric, especially in their trucks. Now theyre they’re like, ‘ Can I get in on the pilot programme? I heard you could get us a truck.’”

Some time with the Lightning shows why. While electric vehicles are often referred to as batteries on wheels, the Lightning might be better described as a mobile power strip. The extended-range Lightning I test driven featured a 240-volt outlet in the truck bed that can power heavy-duty machinery from 9,6 kilowatts of carbon-free electricit­y generated onboard. There are also two 120-volt outlets in the cab, four in the bed and another four in the cavernous front trunk that Ford calls a “Mega Power Frunk”.

“The real value right off the bat is the gas savings, as California gas prices are out-ofsight,” says Steve Dutton, a fifth-generation farmer and co-owner of Dutton Ranch, which is powered in part by a solar array.

“As we get the trucks and put them into service, we’re going see more and more opportunit­ies where we can use that electric power for equipment out in the field.”

The pick-up’s ability to keep Dutton’s employees’ lights on is particular­ly attractive in a place like California, where wildfires and heat waves have triggered seasonal blackouts in recent years.

“If there’s a power outage and the truck is parked at one of my boys’ houses, and he can run the house off the battery, that’s awesome,” says Dutton, who is married to Kruse.

Transformi­ng a Lightning into a

home generator requires Ford’s 80-amp charging station and a home integratio­n system from Sunrun Inc. Installati­on cost for the Sunrun system varies according to the home and location. The charging station comes with the extended-range version of the Lightning; it’s an option for buyers of the standard 230 mile-range version of the pickup.

If the Lightning is plugged in when a blackout hits, the home automatica­lly begins drawing electricit­y from the battery. When power is restored, the system disconnect­s and then resumes charging the vehicle. Ford says the Lightning can fully power an average home for roughly three days.

“That’s a house like my house with AC, Xbox, kids going crazy leaving lights on everywhere,” Linda Zhang, chief engineer of the F-150 Lightning, tells Bloomberg Green.

With more frugal use, the Lightning could keep a home running for up to 10 days, she says.

Zhang, who has the backup system installed at her home, says half of retail reservatio­ns for the Lightning are from people who have never owned a truck.

“That new customer to trucks is really being brought in, in my mind, by the Mega Power Frunk and by the Pro Power Onboard,” she says.

“And some people are just truly, really interested in this product as a backup generator.”

She declined to say whether future Ford electric vehicles will feature bi-directiona­l capability. capabili

“This sucker’s quick!”

Whether Whet the technology helps speed electrific­ation trificatio depends on how it will perform in day-to-day t life, according to Debapriya Chakrabort­y, Chakrab a researcher at the University of California Califo at Davis Institute of Transporta­tion Studies. St

“If you need to travel during a power outage, there are some limitation­s,” says Chakrabort­y, who stu studies consumer attitudes toward EVs.

“If yo you’re charging on solar, then you can use the battery power to probably run any machine machi in the evening, when electricit­y rates are a higher.”

The Th version of the pickup aimed at commercial merc fleets, called the Lightning Pro, has a US starting s price of US$39 974 (~R625 000) before befo state and federal rebates and tax credits. cred With those incentives, the price is comparable com with the base F-150 gasoline model. mo From there, the Lightning can

veer vee into “cowboy Cadillac” territory, with increasing­ly inc luxe models that top out with the Platinum edition.

Ford brought more than a dozen trucks to Sonoma for media test drives, and I spent an hour pil piloting a uS$77 000 (~R1,2m) “iced blue silver” ”L Lightning Lariat around the Russian River Valley’s narrow winding roads, cocooned in a whisper-quiet cabin. The nearly 3-tonne pickup handled like a much smaller vehicle, and I can confirm Joe Biden wasn’t exaggerati­ng when he said “this sucker’s quick” after a lap last year.

Not being a truck person, I needed a reality check. So I texted my impression­s of the Lightning to my friend John, a craftsman who drives a 1990 F-150 and is the type of traditiona­l customer Ford needs to electrify.

“I want one!” he wrote back.

“US$40K (~R625k) — but I just filled the old truck to the tune of US$140 (~R2 100). I should get my name on the list.”

 ?? ?? “Mega Power Frunk”
“Mega Power Frunk”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe