Home Climate ChangeLabour Council Scraps Electric Garbage Trucks, Goes Back To Diesel

Labour Council Scraps Electric Garbage Trucks, Goes Back To Diesel

by Martyn Jones

Labour Council Scraps Electric Garbage Trucks, Goes Back To Diesel
A Labour-led council has scrapped plans for a fleet of electric bin lorries [electric garbage trucks] after a trial run found too many “faults” with the electric vehicle (EV) models. [some emphasis, links added]

Wakefield council previously pledged to become carbon-neutral by 2030 and assessed an electric refuse-collection truck for a year.

However, recurring “charging infrastructure and onboard charging faults” led to the vehicle being taken out of service repeatedly.

The local authority said that electric bin lorries “were not practical for heavy-duty, stop-start urban routes” and that the borough had “insufficient” charging infrastructure for a battery-powered fleet.

After the trial, the council – which declared a climate emergency in 2019 – decided to replace its aging diesel-powered fleet with new diesel lorries, rather than zero-emission models.

A spokesman said:

“To ensure reliability, we will be replacing our bin lorry fleet with new diesel vehicles for now.

“We will continue to expand our use of low-emission, smaller, and medium-sized electric vehicles, and keep working to find the best clean energy solution for our larger fleet.”

Councillors expressed “disappointment” after being told of the plans at a committee meeting earlier this month.

A report presented to councillors in 2022 revealed that Wakefield council planned to spend £4.9M (US$6.8M) to shift its entire vehicle fleet to electric.

As well as the authority’s 500 road vehicles, it also planned to buy electric ride-on lawn mowers and tractors as part of its “key commitment” to become carbon-neutral by the end of the decade.

Eight in 10 local authorities across Britain declared climate emergencies between May 2019 and 2023, with many racing to [be the first to announce] their green-focused pledges.

The floodgates were opened after the House of Commons agreed on a motion tabled by Jeremy Corbyn, the former Labour leader, for Parliament to declare an emergency.

Local authorities vowed to follow suit by devoting millions of pounds to decarbonize offices, waste-collection trucks, and all council-run services.

Read rest at The Telegraph

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