Daimler, Volvo and Traton plan $600 million truck-charging JV
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[July 05, 2021] FRANKFURT
(Reuters) -Three major European truck manufacturers - Daimler Trucks, AB
Volvo and Traton - said on Monday they plan to form a joint venture (JV)
to develop an electric battery-charging network for long-haul trucks and
buses.
Charging infrastructure expansion has been a central hurdle to the mass
adoption of battery-powered vehicles, with the lack of expansion
fuelling so-called range anxiety, the fear of not having enough charging
spots to make the trip.
"The key ingredient in the future rolling-out of electric vehicles will
be the infrastructure. It will be the big bottleneck," Martin Daum,
chief executive of Daimler Trucks, to be spun off from Daimler later
this year, told Reuters.
The three companies, which are all building electric trucks and are
normally competitors, will jointly invest 500 million euros ($593
million) in the venture that they will own equally and that will start
operations in 2022.
"And thereafter we are very open in all directions to let other parties
partner with us and actually bring equity into the joint venture,"
Traton CEO Matthias Gruendler said, adding he expected a lot of outside
interest once the JV has been set up.
The aim is to install and operate at least 1,700 charging points within
five years. The joint company will be based in Amsterdam and will over
time seek further partners and public funding.
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Daimler AG's FUSO Super Great truck is pictured at the 45th Tokyo
Motor Show in Tokyo, Japan October 27, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File
Photo/File Photo
European car industry association ACEA has called for up to 50,000
high-performance charging points by 2030. Gruendler said that roughly 10 billion
euros would be needed to build out Europe's infrastructure to be fully
electrified by 2050.
"In order to accelerate further, we need additional partners, additional
networks and public funds," AB Volvo CEO Martin Lundstedt said. "We will
continue to be very fierce competitors. But we need a new platform to compete
upon."
($1 = 0.8429 euros)
(Reporting by Ilona Wissenbach and Chris Steitz; writing by Tom Sims; editing by
Barbara Lewis and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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