http://wfae.org/post/charlotte-company-hopes-lead-electric-truck-revolution
Charlotte Company Hopes To Lead Electric Truck Revolution
By Ben Bradford  September 29, 2014

[audio
http://cpa.ds.npr.org/wfae/audio/2014/09/092614EVBB2.mp3


images  
http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/wfae/files/201409/Condor.jpg
A prototype of EV Fleet's Condor, which the company demonstrated during a
demo day. The truck bed's paint will match the rest of the car in final
versions, the company says.
Credit Ben Bradford / WFAE

http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/wfae/files/201409/e-ride.jpg
UNC Charlotte is also considering the smaller e-ride, a low-speed
vehicle--certified to drive speeds up to 35 mph--to replace some of its Ford
Rangers.
Credit e-ride

http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/wfae/files/201409/Condor_Prep.jpg
EV Fleet mechanics work to prepare the truck for its demo. The space under
the hood serves as a trunk.
Credit Ben Bradford / WFAE
]

Electric cars were largely novelties until Tesla introduced its Roadster in
2008. Now, a few small start-ups are trying to repeat Tesla’s success in
another sector of the electric vehicle industry. They’re building trucks,
hoping to sell them en masse to government and business fleets.

Inside a warehouse at Reventure Park on the edge of Charlotte, mechanics
tighten bolts and glue insulation on a shiny blue pickup truck. They are
putting the finishing touches on the Condor, getting it ready for its debut
to possible buyers.

The all-electric truck features smooth lines and no grill, to cut down on
drag. While running on electricity may not be odd for a car these days,
trucks need more power for hauling and no standard electric truck option
exists in the U.S. Brooks Agnew founded EV Fleet to create one.

“This is the first fully designed from the ground up electric truck, and it
is very quick,” Agnew says “I mean really quick, like sports car quick, and
it’s able to go over 100 miles on a charge and carry weight.”

The idea, Agnew says, is to compete to replace the very popular, but
decommissioned Ford Ranger in public and private fleets. It would be easy to
dismiss the lofty claims. Among other things, Agnew has spent years trying
to organize an expedition to the North Pole to see if the earth is hollow.
And, EV Fleet has had several iterations under different names. But, Agnew
has decades of automotive experience, and, most of all, the truck works,
zipping smoothly around South End all day during its demo. Several fleet
managers attended the demo and had positive reviews.

“I've done some research into it. As far as I can tell the truck looks
pretty solid, and that’s why we’re looking into it,” says Chris Facente, who
manages UNC Charlotte’s more than 400 vehicles.

Other representatives attended from the state, the City of Charlotte, and
Duke Energy. Facente already has about 100 electric vehicles in his
fleet—mostly the low-speed, golf-cart sized GEMs, which staff use to travel
the campus and carry very light deliveries.

“The novelty’s really going out of the electric vehicle. It’s going to be
here to stay in the right applications,” Facente says.

He says it makes sense to use them, but only for jobs they have the power to
do, without worry the battery will run out.

“When they used to build cars they used to have to build  a vehicle that
could survive in Anchorage, Alaska and Death Valley, California. And now
things are going more toward a specialty,” Facente says.

The university will soon need to replace its aging Ford Rangers, but that is
a big step up for electric technology. There are a few options: the Condor,
a converted full-size truck from Utah-based VIA Motors, or perhaps
Minnesota-based e-ride’s low-speed vehicle, which looks like a cross between
a Jeep and a golf cart. Last week, Facente test drove an e-ride around
campus, and he plans to try the Condor this week.

Or, he could stick with a gas or diesel Ford F150, which would certainly be
safer than buying a $50,000 truck from EV-Fleet’s 13-man shop.

“The concern would be parts replacement more than anything. Will this truck
have enough parts where I can get parts?” Facente says.

If the company goes out of business, so do their custom parts. Add to that,
most public organizations buy from government-approved vendors, which makes
it tough for newcomers to break in.

“I’d be lying if I were to say that it’s not difficult,” says Sean Flaherty,
a senior planner at the Centralina Clean Fuels Coalition, a
government-sponsored non-profit that works with fleets to incorporate
alternative vehicles. “The big guys have been doing this for a long time.
They have the distribution; they have the supply chain in place.”

Electric cars are a growing part of vehicle fleets—Charlotte began buying
Nissan Leafs and Chevy Volts two years ago, but those are products of the
major automakers. Some corporations like Staples and FedEx have converted
some of their delivery trucks, but overall electrics make up an immeasurably
small fraction of the six million trucks in U.S. fleets.

“Eventually there will be a crossover point,” says Travis Bradford (no
relation), the director of Columbia University’s Energy and Environment
program. “Long term this is where we’re headed, from a pure economics point
of view. But, in the meantime, the only way to get there is to see the
industry tested and scaled up to allow that to happen.

And that is where we are right now, Bradford says. Fleets are testing the
water, but not buying big.

Of course, it took one small company to jumpstart the electric car industry.
Maybe EV Fleet will do the same for trucks.
[© wfae.org]




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