Truck makers rev up for rollout of electric big rigs
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[October 22, 2018]
By Nick Carey
DETROIT (Reuters) - Tesla Inc <TSLA.O>
Chief Executive Elon Musk put electric heavy commercial trucks on the
map in November 2017 when he unveiled the company's futuristic,
battery-powered Semi, booked hundreds of orders and said he would start
delivering the vehicles by 2019.
Now, it looks like 2020 could be the big year for electric big rigs.
Incumbent truck makers are accelerating their electric truck projects
toward launches that year, while Musk told investors in June production
of the eye-catching Semi freight hauler should begin "basically (in the)
first half of 2020" instead of 2019.
Driven by regulatory pressure to cut diesel pollution, commercial truck
makers have made a flurry of fresh announcements to deliver battery
electric or hydrogen-fueled vehicles. They have landed orders from big
fleet operators such as Walmart Inc <WMT.N>, United Parcel Service Inc <UPS.N>
and Anheuser Busch Inbev NV <ABI.BR>.
The challenge is gauging how big the market for electric commercial
trucks will be, especially outside of China.
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The limited range of most first-generation electric or hydrogen
commercial trucks and a lack of charging infrastructure threaten to
limit sales to short-haul operations.
In China, regulators are considering a long-term plan to replace 1
million diesel big rigs with cleaner trucks, including electric models,
and some Chinese ports and cities are banning diesel trucks, which could
significantly boost sales.
In the United States, the outlook for electric truck demand is cloudier.
Some analysts estimate that by the mid-2020s, U.S. annual electric truck
sales may number only in the hundreds. Over the last 12 months, North
American diesel and so-called semitruck orders totaled 497,000 units.
Toyota Motor Corp's <7203.T> experience at the Ports of Los Angeles and
Long Beach illustrates the potential, and the problems for clean truck
technology.
The first of Toyota’s working hydrogen fuel-cell trucks was designed
with a 200-mile (322 km) range for daily operations and has already
logged more than 10,000 miles running short routes around the ports.
The newer second iteration has a 300-mile range but that is still well
short of the 1,000 miles or more diesel trucks can run between refueling
stops.
Toyota has not provided a production timeline, but executive program
manager Chris Rovik said “so far we feel confident the technology is
absolutely applicable to this type of use case.”
"CHICKEN AND EGG PROBLEM"
Fueling infrastructure is a major headache for electric and hydrogen
trucks.
Hyundai Motor Co <005380.KS> commercial vehicle director Mark
Freymueller describes a chicken-and-egg problem: Trucking companies are
reluctant to buy trucks without fueling stations, but fuel station
operators will not install them without trucking customers.
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A Toyota Project Portal
hydrogen fuel cell electric semi-truck is shown during an event in
San Francisco, California, U.S., September 13, 2018. REUTERS/Stephen
Lam/File Photo
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Battery electric trucks can take hours to recharge and charging stations are
scarce in most U.S. states. Hydrogen trucks can be refueled in about the same
time as a diesel truck - but hydrogen refueling stations are even rarer, with
most concentrated in California.
"Fueling infrastructure is a very important first step," said Chris Cannon,
chief sustainability officer for the Port of Los Angeles. "The trucks may work
great, but if they can't get any fuel they can't operate."
Last month, the California Air Resources Board announced $41 million in grants
to the port toward building 10 new hydrogen fuel-cell electric trucks to be
developed by Toyota and Paccar Inc <PCAR.O> unit Kenworth. The grant will also
partly-fund two new hydrogen fuel stations to be built by Royal Dutch Shell Plc
<RDSa.AS>.
Most manufacturers see short-haul routes such as drayage services to or from
ports or rail yards as likely first adopters of electric or hydrogen trucks.
"We think the first applications are going to be shorter haul," said Denny
Mooney, Navistar International Corp's <NAV.N> vice president of engineering.
"We're going to start out where the business makes sense."
Tesla customers like Deutsche Post <DPWGn.DE> unit DHL, which has ordered 10
Semis, say they could save tens of thousands of dollars on maintenance and fuel
annually.
CEO Musk says the Semi's range could hit 600 miles. But a spokesperson said
running uphill with air conditioning on or running other appliances would cut
that range. Many modern 18-wheelers contain televisions, fridges and other
appliances.
Package delivery giant UPS has pre-ordered 125 Tesla Semis and will use them on
daily routes hauling packages between hubs and on UPS Freight routes between
businesses - mostly shorter routes.
"In many ways we are ideally suited to be an early adopter of this technology
because we don't have much long-haul business," said UPS spokesman Glenn Zaccara.
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Tesla is working with potential customers including UPS, Pepsico <PEP.O> and
Anheuser-Busch to build charging stations at their facilities.
Nikola Motor Co, a startup offering a fuel cell truck, has ambitious
multibillion-dollar plans to build 700 U.S. hydrogen fueling stations over the
next decade, starting along the major routes of Anheuser-Busch, which has
ordered up to 800 trucks, says CEO Trevor Milton. Nikola has secured funding for
those stations, he said.
(Additional reporting by Eric Johnson in Seattle, Hyunjoo Jin in Seoul, Norihiko
Shirouzu and Yilei Sun in Beijing; Editing by Tom Brown)
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