 
     Next year sees the start of the first real-life electrified road system for transporting freight.     
     
Worldwide freight transportation is predicted to double by 2050 but despite expansion of global rail infrastructure only one third of this additional freight transport can be handled by trains. This means that the largest proportion of freight transport will continue to be by road and as a result, experts expect global CO2 emissions from road freight traffic to more than double by 2050.
     
It is calculated that 64% of freight in the US is delivered by road and that the trucks delivering those goods account for 18% of the country’s NOx production 5% of greenhouse gas emission (see graphs). These challenges, combined with concerns about fuel prices and energy security, highlight the need for solutions that can address not only the expected increase in transport but also employ technology that offset or overcome the environmental and economic problems too.
     
 One sustainable solution to improve transportation systems today and in the future is electromobility. Though the term ‘electromobility’ may bring to mind electric cars, there are other important ways transportation systems can utilise electricity to power vehicles both small and large. 
     
The ‘eHighway’ from 
     
The first real-world demonstration project of the technology will take place in California near the Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles, the two largest ports in America, and is due to begin operation in July 2015. Working with the South Coast Air Quality Management District, Siemens is to install an eHighway system along one mile of a highly-travelled corridor near the ports. Up to four trucks will be running in the one-year demonstration, making multiple trips each day.  As this is the first operational trial of the technology there are no official projections regarding savings on emissions and running costs, so the project’s findings will act as benchmark of what the technology can achieve.  
     
 
Technology
Using technology similar to trolley systems or streetcars with overhead contact lines, the eHighway system will use an active pantograph to conduct direct current (DC) electricity to an electric and/or electric-hybrid truck. The drive system will enable full electric operation when connected to the contact line while retaining an engine, or other form stored energy, supplies power when outside of the contact lines.
     
Unlike rail technology the eHighway contact line system is designed with two poles (one to handle the power in-feed and the other the out-feed) because the current return circuit cannot flow via the road in the same way it can through a rail. Overhead contact lines provide a secure energy supply at speeds up to 96kmh (60mph). A substation connected to the medium voltage grid located near the eHighway provides power to the overhead contact lines and can collect and feed it back energy from regenerative braking system to further increase the efficiency achievable from the technology.
 
 An active pantograph atop the truck transfers the energy  from the overhead lines to the electric motor and can connect and  disconnect with the contact line automatically at statutory speeds.  As  soon as the truck-mounted optical scanner recognises an overhead line,  the pantograph is ready to connect and it can also be extended  automatically or manually from inside the vehicle. This allows  significant flexibility as the eHighway trucks can easily switch lanes  or pass other vehicles without being permanently fixed to the overhead  systems like a streetcar. 
     
Each  truck will be equipped with either an all-electric or a hybrid drive  systems comprising a drive motor, generator, inverter, on-board energy  storage and DC/DC converter. The eHighway system could be combined with  most other technology, be it diesel, natural gas (CNG/LNG), battery or  fuel-cell for powering the vehicle outside of the catenary. 
     
While  details are yet to be finalised the eHighway technology being  demonstrated in California looks set to feature a hybrid diesel/electric  truck, one powered by a compressed natural gas/electric hybrid drive  train and an all-electric truck that runs on battery power outside of  the contact line. The option remains for a fourth vehicle with a  different configuration to be added to the trial.
     
Already  under development for the project is a diesel-hybrid demonstration  vehicle which is being built a partnership between Siemens and Mack  Trucks, a subsidiary of 
     
Mack’s  11-liter engine develops 302kW (405hp) and 2,115Nm (1,560lbft), which  is mid-range for this type of vehicle and work. According to Jan  Hellaker, Volvo Group vice president of transport solutions: “Besides  further reducing exhaust emissions and fuel usage without compromising  performance, the MP7 engine delivers a significant weight advantage and  helps offset the weight of add-on components required for the  eHighway.”  
     
The trucks  will operate in full-electric mode when on the eHighway routes and will  automatically switch to the diesel/mechanical drive system where there  is no overhead line. 
     
  
Benefits of eHighway
Siemens  expects adopting eHighway technology to result in a number of  environmental and economic benefits due to the increased efficiency an  electric motor has in comparison with a diesel engine. Typically a  diesel engine is 35%-40% efficient while an electric traction motor is  around 95% efficient while total efficiency from in-feed at the  substation to the wheel is estimated to 80%-85%. So when the test  vehicles are powered electricity, roughly twice as much of the input  energy reaches the wheels - or put another way, half as much energy is  needed to move the same load. It is also a possible to use regenerative  braking to further improves the overall efficiency. This translates into  significantly reduced operating costs, which can finance the investment  costs, especially on frequently used routes. 
 
 Using  electricity also eliminates  the local emissions associated with diesel  engines, greatly improving  the local air quality. At the same time, the  eHighway concept allows  the use of renewable electricity in heavy duty  road freight, opening up  the possibility to greatly reduce the green  house gas emissions caused  by the freight industry. It is also possible  that roadside solar  panels and wind turbines could be used to feed the  overhead power lines  which would reduce the carbon footprint still  further.
     
Contact  line systems have been proven  to work reliably and cheaply across the  world for more than a century,  strengthening the case that this  technology can be used successfully for  other modes of transportation.  Furthermore, the system can be installed  along existing roads, greatly  reducing investment and maintenance  costs, and without disrupting  traffic – an important consideration in  severely space constrained and  heavily trafficked areas like ports. Two  studies estimate the cost of  installing gantries and sub-station  connections to be in the region of  $5 – 6 million per km  ($8 - $9.6  million per mile).  
     
  
Electrifying Applications
The California eHighway project focuses on heavy-truck transport in key logistical hubs like ports but there are a number of other potential applications for electrified road freight. Mining is another example of trucks transporting goods on a small but regularly travelled route that may not warrant a separate rail connection. An eHighway concept in this setting could result in similar reductions in costs and emissions as the port demonstration.Electrification is potentially applicable for almost any routes highly-travelled by trucks or other heavy-duty vehicles and over the coming decade will provide an ever increasing market for eHighway vehicles. Economies of scale will reduce prices and open the way for truck operations on moderate or diverse duty cycles. Regional or national highways may be considered for eHighway applications and with the expected standardisation of the vehicle technology, the challenge will shift to the traffic management.
This would include organising the billing and enforcement required to operate an eHighway system open to all suitable vehicles.
Looking to the Future
The California project is crucial to understanding how electricity can answer today’s transportation challenges and to demonstrate zero emission road freight. Installing the technology in a real-world scenario allows it to be evaluated with a view of how it can be scaled up beyond connecting the ports to possibly the surrounding freeways and other cities.
In the future it might then be possible to electrify the highway network. These electric trucks would be able to charge their on-board storage from the powerline while on the move to make deliveries away from the electrified route – a concept that could have significant potential in densely populated nations. It also may not be so far off that we’ll see highway signs for HOV, Exit Ramps and also an ‘E’ lane.
Meeting greenhouse gas reduction targets and efficiently serving the transportation needs of a dynamic economy can only be achieved with new solutions. Using electricity is a key way to bring the transportation systems of yesterday into the present and to test the ideas of tomorrow.
 
     
        



