Hey Grumpy,
I was really surprised a few months ago when our local Staples delivery showed up in an ALL ELECTRIC truck! Here's an article about them that I googled (parts of the article cut out to shorten), here's the link also:
http://www.worktruckonline.com/Channel/ ... rucks.aspx
Last November, office supply giant Staples, Inc., of Framingham, Mass., added 41 new all-electric Class 6 Smith Newton delivery trucks to its fleet of 2,000 vehicles in North America.
The purchase is part of Staples' ongoing fuel-efficiency initiative, started in 2006, to achieve a 40-percent improvement in fleet fuel economy by 2015 and significantly reduce its carbon footprint.
Manufactured by Smith Electric Vehicles, based in Kansas City, Mo., the Newton all-electric medium-duty chassis offers a range up to 100 miles, top speed of 50 mph, and a payload capacity up to 16,000 lbs., ideal for short-range urban delivery applications that demand heavy stop-and-go driving.
180 of our routes operate between 35-70 miles per day. That's why electric vehicles are perfect for the L.A. market, as well as many other inner city metropolitan-type markets. ...making 50-60 deliveries per day.
When you factor available federal and state funds, the cost of these electric trucks is roughly two times the cost of a conventional-powered diesel truck.
WT: How long do you anticipate it will take for you to recoup that investment?
PAYETTE: Understand that over the life of the vehicle, the equation in place today will change. Fuel prices will change; the electric rate I'm paying is likely to change. However, if you use today's numbers, here's what you're looking at:
If you're going to run a diesel truck on a 100-mile route at 10 miles per gallon, that's roughly $35 in diesel fuel to cover the route. In California, by charging electric trucks during off-peak hours, we're paying $9 in electricity to run the same 100-mile route. So that's about $8,900 per year for fuel and $2,300 in electricity.
Since we plan to keep these units in service at least 10 years, the overall differential is $66,000 per truck - if fuel remained $3.50 per gallon or $0.10-$0.12 per kilowatt hour. That alone offsets the incremental cost of the electric vehicle over 10 years without even talking maintenance.
Dora~Jean:
So there you have it, an electric, short-range tow vehicle! But you also have to add those "other" costs, like replacing the battery bank(s) every 5-10 years. The standard Prius pretty much maintains the battery bank at or near full charge, and generally don't need replacement for 8-10 yrs or so from what I've read ($3000-6000?). However, the Chevy Volt depletes/recharges every usage overnight. I wonder if that requires the Chevy's batteries to be replaced more often? And how much are their batteries?