Skip to main content

Helsinki launches electric bus pilot

Helsinki Region Transport (HSL) and the Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT) are to launch an extensive joint pilot to introduce light-weight electric buses in Helsinki, where the demanding climatic conditions provide an excellent test environment. The first 12 buses, made from aluminium and developed by Linkker, will purchased by HSL and be in service by late summer. The buses will be equipped with sensors to collect data and a real-time monitoring and control system will be developed to receive info
February 26, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
6995 Helsinki Region Transport (HSL) and the Technical Research Centre of Finland (814 VTT) are to launch an extensive joint pilot to introduce light-weight electric buses in Helsinki, where the demanding climatic conditions provide an excellent test environment.

The first 12 buses, made from aluminium and developed by Linkker, will purchased by HSL and be in service by late summer.

The buses will be equipped with sensors to collect data and a real-time monitoring and control system will be developed to receive information about battery charge levels. Their performance will be evaluated in VTT's chassis dynamometer.

The pilot is part of a wider four-year development project of innovative and emission-free bus transport in order to create the infrastructure and operating network for the introduction of new technologies.

"Thanks to their light weight, the buses will also be extremely energy-efficient. The batteries will be quick-charged at the terminal. Other benefits include zero emissions and quiet operation," says Linkker's managing director Kimmo Erkkilä.

"VTT has been involved in the development of electric buses right from the start, and we are pleased to say that Finland is creating an international reference for electric buses," says Nils-Olof Nylund, head of VTT's TransSmart research programme.

HSL's target is to reduce carbon dioxide emissions and harmful local emissions from bus transport by over 90 per cent by 2025. In order to reach this target, HSL has to implement electric buses, new low-emission diesel vehicles and biofuels.

Related Content

  • April 16, 2012
    Fuel cell system sets record
    UTC Power, a United Technologies company, has announced that one of its latest generation PureMotion System Model 120 fuel cell powerplants for hybrid-electric transit buses has surpassed 10,000 operating hours in real-world service with its original cell stacks and no cell replacements. This powerplant is aboard an Alameda-Contra Costa Transit District (AC Transit) bus operating in the Greater Oakland, California area.
  • January 11, 2017
    The bus future is electric, says UITP
    More and more cities in Europe and around the world are turning to electric buses (or e-buses) in an effort to go green according to UITP’s new ZeEUS eBus Report. The report, published as part of the Zero Emission Urban Bus System project, reveals that 19 public transport operators and authorities, covering around 25 European cities, have a published e-bus strategy for 2020. By this date, there should be more than 2,500 electric buses operating in these cities, representing six per cent of their total fl
  • June 22, 2021
    Hydrogen: transportation's silver bullet?
    As the quest for carbon-neutrality becomes a key political and economic driver, everyone is on the lookout for new sources of energy - so perhaps hydrogen’s time has come
  • February 12, 2016
    New LowCVP report: The Journey of the Green Bus
    A new report by the LowCVP for Greener Journeys describes The Journey of the Green Bus; how innovation and supportive policy over the last decade and more has transformed the bus sector from being a part of the problem to being an important part of the solution to poor urban air quality as well as contributing to tackling climate change.