Skip to main content

Greensboro Transit Authority lo debut Poterra electric bus fleet

Manufacturer of zero-emission heavy-duty vehicles Proterra has announced that Greensboro Transit Authority (GTA) will purchase four of its electric buses this fall as part of a joint effort to minimize emissions, reduce traffic congestion and accelerate sustainable infrastructure development. The 40-foot Proterra buses will replace retiring fossil fuel buses and are designed with the intention of eliminating more than 1.2 million lbs of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Over their 12-year lifespan, the
November 15, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
Manufacturer of zero-emission heavy-duty vehicles Proterra has announced that Greensboro Transit Authority (GTA) will purchase four of its electric buses this fall as part of a joint effort to minimize emissions, reduce traffic congestion and accelerate sustainable infrastructure development.
 
The 40-foot Proterra buses will replace retiring fossil fuel buses and are designed with the intention of eliminating more than 1.2 million lbs of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Over their 12-year lifespan, the Proterra buses are estimated to create maintenance and operation cost savings of over $1.7 million (£1.2 million).
 
GTA has a five-year contract with Proterra and expects to purchase additional buses as it works to replace its full fleet.
 
Adam Fischer, director of the Greensboro Department of Transportation, said: "At GTA, we want to offer our riders the opportunity to make sustainable choices through public transit. These new battery-electric Proterra buses will not only provide an environmentally-friendly service to our customers, they'll also exemplify GTA's commitment to eco-conscious infrastructure adoption and to strong fiscal responsibility, Providing the community with the best service possible, and doing so in a way that benefits our residents and the environment, is at the core of GTA. As we move forward with the Mobility Greensboro 2040 plan, cutting back on emissions levels and laying the foundation for sustainable urban ecosystems will be key to the future of our Greensboro transportation system. That's why we're more than excited to officially deploy our new electric buses in the coming year."

Related Content

  • November 27, 2017
    Get bus orders CNG buses from New Flyer
    Golden Empire Transit District (GET bus) has awarded transit bus and motor coach manufacturer New Flyer of America with a contract for 24 Xcelsior compressed natural gas transit buses. The order supports Get Bus’s focus on environmental sustainability. This new contract for the forty-foot, heavy duty transit buses also supports plans for aged fleet replacement. Wayne Joseph, president of New Flyer of America, said: "We are proud to help advance Get bus in its pursuit of fleet revitalization and
  • November 22, 2021
    LA microgrid to charge 100 e-buses
    Project is expected to reduce emissions and lower LADoT’s electricity costs 
  • May 9, 2016
    New Zealand government driving the switch to electric vehicles
    The New Zealand government has announced plans to double the number of electric vehicles in the country every year to reach approximately 64,000 by 2021 in an ambitious and wide ranging package of measures to increase the uptake of electric vehicles. The package also includes extending the road user charges exemption on light electric vehicles until they make up two percent of the light vehicle fleet and a new road user charges exemption for heavy electric vehicles until they make up two percent of the h
  • July 27, 2016
    US DOT announces 2016 funding for clean buses
    The US Department of Transportation’s Federal Transit Administration (FTA) has announced the 20 transit providers in 13 states which will receive a share of US$55 million under its Low or No-Emission (Low-No) Bus Competitive Grant Program. The program provides funding for buses and related technology that replaces aging diesel fuel buses with battery-electric or fuel cell-powered vehicles and incorporates other innovations. Among the projects selected to receive 2016 Low-No funding are the Santa Clara Va