Construction News

Wed April 24 2024

Related Information

Battery-powered construction trucks on sale next year

5 Nov 20 A range of battery-powered heavy-duty trucks for construction industry applications will be on sale from Volvo in 2021, the Swedish company has announced.

Electric concrete mixer truck
Electric concrete mixer truck

Volvo Trucks will offer a complete heavy-duty range with electric drivelines, it promises.

It is running tests of the electric heavy-duty Volvo FH, Volvo FM and Volvo FMX trucks, which will be used for regional transport and urban construction operations in Europe. These trucks will have a gross combination weight of up to 44 tonnes. Depending on the battery configuration, the range could be up to 300 km.

Sales will begin next year and volume production will start in 2022.

"By rapidly increasing the number of heavy-duty electric trucks, we want to help our customers and transport buyers to achieve their ambitious sustainability goals,” said Roger Alm, president of Volvo Trucks. “We're determined to continue driving our industry towards a sustainable future."

Volvo Trucks started manufacturing the Volvo FL Electric and Volvo FE Electric in 2019. These are electric trucks intended for city distribution and refuse operations, primarily in Europe. Sales of the Volvo VNR Electric, a truck for regional transport, will start in North America next month.

Related Information

Electric vehicles for demanding and heavy long-haul operations will follow within the next 10 years, Volvo says. These will be battery-electric and fuel cell electric trucks with a longer range. Volvo Trucks aims to start selling electric trucks powered by hydrogen fuel cells in the second half of this decade. Volvo Trucks' objective is for its entire product range to be fossil-free by 2040.

"To reduce the impact of transport on the climate, we need to make a swift transition from fossil fuels to alternatives such as electricity. But the conditions for making this shift, and consequently the pace of the transition, vary dramatically across different hauliers and markets, depending on many variables such as financial incentives, access to charging infrastructure and type of transport operations," said Roger Alm.

For this reason, most transport companies will change over to electric operation in stages. In practice, many of them will have a mixed fleet of trucks powered by different fuels during a transition period.

"Our chassis are designed to be independent of the driveline used. Our customers can choose to buy several Volvo trucks of the same model, with the only difference being that some are electric and others are powered by gas or diesel. As regards product characteristics, such as the driver's environment, reliability and safety, all our vehicles meet the same high standards. Drivers should feel familiar with their vehicles and be able to operate them safely and efficiently regardless of the fuel used," he added.

Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk

MPU
MPU

Click here to view latest construction news »