How the pandemic is delivering the electric truck - E&E News
Call it a coronavirus side effect. As millions of homebound customers turn to e-commerce for shopping, a new kind of vehicle is starting to appear on the manifest: the electric delivery truck.
"All the companies like FedEx, UPS and Amazon that are having to make those deliveries are being strained," said Randy Mullett, a trucking and freight consultant based in Washington. "And almost all of them have very active electric or alternative-fuel programs."
More delivery means more commercial trucks and vans. And fleets of electric trucks, just a couple of years ago a farfetched notion, are suddenly generating lots of buzz.
Call it a coronavirus side effect. As millions of homebound customers turn to e-commerce for shopping, a new kind of vehicle is starting to appear on the manifest: the electric delivery truck.
"All the companies like FedEx, UPS and Amazon that are having to make those deliveries are being strained," said Randy Mullett, a trucking and freight consultant based in Washington. "And almost all of them have very active electric or alternative-fuel programs."
More delivery means more commercial trucks and vans. And fleets of electric trucks, just a couple of years ago a farfetched notion, are suddenly generating lots of buzz.