Skip to main content

Australia invests $20m in e-bus trials

Victoria’s first e-bus has saved 61 tonnes of CO2 emissions
By Ben Spencer December 1, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
The trial will test different technologies on buses over the next three years (© Scharfsinn86 | Dreamstime.com)

The Victoria government in Australia is to invest $20 million from its 2020/21 budget to investigate solutions to achieve a zero-emission bus fleet.

Over the next three years, the trial will test different technologies on buses and develop according to which solutions work best for riders and fleets. 

The project is expected to support Victoria's commitment to achieving zero net emissions by 2050.

A statement issued by the premier of Victoria Dan Andrews’ website says the state’s first electric bus has saved 61 tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions over 300 days.

It reveals the e-bus is now running on Route 251 between the city and Northland Shopping Centre, clocking up more than 32,900 km and travelling nearly 1,000 km on just two charges.

The bus uses 324 kW Lithium Phosphate batteries.

Ben Carroll, minister for public transport in Victoria, says: “Our buses get thousands of Victorians where they need to go. This investment will ensure a cleaner trip for our planet – and deliver hundreds of long-term jobs in the technology of the future.”
 
“We want Victoria to become a global leader in smart, sustainable transport solutions – backing our local manufacturing industry and the thousands of Victorians it employs,” he adds.

Measures are already being taken to introduce cleaner modes of transport in Victoria. In February, ComfortDelGro Australia secured a ‘green’ loan from OCBC Bank to finance a fleet of 50 hybrid buses in the state of Victoria.

Elsewhere in Australia, there are currently 40 hybrid buses operating in Melbourne and eight in Victoria’s Latrobe Valley.


 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Australia to trial autonomous vehicles on public roads
    December 19, 2016
    Australia’s Victorian government is to begin a trial to look at how automated vehicles can interact with Australian road infrastructure. VicRoads will work with industry to seek feedback on the government’s Future Directions Paper, which outlines the need for regulatory changes to allow testing of highly automated vehicles on public roads. The consultation will focus on how to ensure road safety during testing on public roads, what constitutes a driver ‘being in control’ and understanding how the changi
  • Australia 'must look to Europe' as template for ITS data governance
    April 5, 2024
    ITS Australia conference in Brisbane also focused on key projects and collaboration
  • Bus location system delivers real-time passenger information
    November 28, 2012
    VeriFone Systems has installed its open-architecture vehicle tracking TransitPAY system on more than 1,000 buses serving the Bronx, following the award of a US$8.5 million contract by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) of New York. The Bronx contract award follows a similar contract in 2011 for the Staten Island fleet component of the MTA Bus Time system, which uses VeriFone on-board systems to generate location data that is communicated wirelessly to the Bus Time server that passengers can acc
  • Littlepay's in transit in Costa Rica
    June 30, 2022
    Central American country is adopting new contactless system for public transport payments