Skip to main content

Electric buses take new forms

Data from IDTechEx claims there are many new forms of electric bus arriving in quite a rush. Last year saw pure electric double decker and articulated buses. This year there is speculation that the work by Siemens of Germany on long distance pure electric trucks being charged by short lengths of overhead catenary could also apply to buses. That should involve much lower cost than the other zero pollution option the fuel cell bus. Now Switzerland has joined other places around the world newly exploring t
June 30, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Data from 6582 IDTechEx claims there are many new forms of electric bus arriving in quite a rush. Last year saw pure electric double decker and articulated buses. This year there is speculation that the work by 189 Siemens of Germany on long distance pure electric trucks being charged by short lengths of overhead catenary could also apply to buses. That should involve much lower cost than the other zero pollution option the fuel cell bus.
 
Now Switzerland has joined other places around the world newly exploring the potential of electric autonomous buses, with a pair of driverless shuttles now ferrying passengers around the city of Sion as part of a two-year trial.
 
Others being tested out across the globe include the EZ10 in California and Singapore, Navia also in Singapore, and the Olli in Washington DC that can talk to passengers. Switzerland's autonomous buses will also take to public roads with local regulators assessing a wider deployment of low-carbon, autonomous mass transport. Operated by Switzerland's leading public bus operator, PostBus, they will navigate Sion's city streets with software by BestMile, a spin out of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne.
 
Dr Peter Harrop, chairman of IDTechEx says, "Electric buses are now more important than cars in several ways. They will still be around when some city centres ban cars. They are a bigger market for lithium-ion batteries by value than cars and they pioneer many new technologies first because up-front price is less important."

Related Content

  • June 23, 2016
    Battery vehicle ‘now viable for very long distances’
    The Tesla 3 gets nearly double the range of the Nissan Leaf by using nearly double the amount of battery but engineers are using a multitude of work rounds to do better: aerodynamics, light-weighting even including structural electronics where dumb structure is replaced by supercapacitors or solid state batteries. Add more efficient motors and powertrain, says Dr Peter Harrop, chairman of IDTechEx Research in its report Industrial and Commercial Electric Vehicles on Land 2016-2026. He goes on to say that
  • July 29, 2015
    Rapid progress with pure electric buses
    China is where most of the hybrid and pure electric buses will be made and sold over the coming decade, as discussed in the report by IDTechEx Research, Electric Buses 2015-2025. Given the concentration of government support on long pure electric range from hybrids and the far simpler pure electric buses, the latter are proving very popular. Indeed articulated and double decker buses are available in pure electric form in China. According to the latest statistics from the Chinese bus industry, the total
  • August 3, 2015
    Electric buses: more billion dollar orders
    China will spend up to one trillion dollars on electric buses over the coming 15 years according to analysts IDTechEx. This will reduce the impact of over 22.5 trillion dollars from air pollution over that time, at least one percent of GDP. More insurrection will occur if corrective action is insufficient because hundreds of thousands are dying from traffic pollution and far more are suffering resultant serious disease. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), outdoor air pollution caused 3.7 m
  • July 13, 2015
    Winners in electric vehicle batteries
    According to market analyst IDTechEx, which tracks the development of 45 electric vehicle categories and not just electric cars, there are now lithium-ion battery options for everything from forklifts and mobility vehicles for the disabled to e-bikes. Indeed, almost all the e-bikes in the West and Japan use them. 8000 forklifts in the USA have fuel cells with lithium-ion batteries though the Toyota Mirai fuel cell car and the Prius hybrid car still use NiMH. Whilst capturing market in micro hybrid cars,