Houston Chronicle

Postal Service set to buy more EVs for deliveries

- By David Sharp

The U.S. Postal Service said it will substantia­lly increase the number of electric-powered vehicles it’s buying to replace its fleet of aging delivery trucks, after the Biden administra­tion and environmen­tal groups said the agency’s initial plan had too few electric vehicles and fell short of the administra­tion’s climate change goals.

The Postal Service now wants 50 percent of its initial purchase of 50,000 next-generation vehicles to be electric, up from the previous plan for 20 percent being electric. The first of those should be rolling onto delivery routes next year. It also proposes buying an additional 34,500 commercial­ly available vehicles over two years, officials said. The Postal Service’s fleet currently includes 190,000 local delivery vehicles.

A plan announced in February would have made just 10 percent of the agency’s next-generation fleet electric. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency said the initial plan “underestim­ates greenhouse gas emissions, fails to consider more environmen­tally protective feasible alternativ­es and inadequate­ly considers impacts on communitie­s with environmen­tal justice concerns.”

The new environmen­tal proposal effectivel­y pauses the purchases at 84,500 total vehicles — 40 percent electric — even as the Postal Service seeks to buy up to 165,000 next-generation vehicles over a decade to replace delivery trucks that went into service between 1987 and 1994. More than 141,000 vehicles in service are the boxy, recog nizable Grumman LLV model, which lack safety features like air bags, antilock brakes or backup cameras.

Environmen­talists have been fighting to reduce the number of gasoline-powered next-generation vehicles the Postal Service will buy. Those will get 14.7 mpg without air conditioni­ng, compared to 8.4 mpg for the older vehicles, the Postal Service said.

Sen. Gary Peters, chairman of the Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee, said Wednesday he was happy to see the Postal Service committing to more electric vehicles, which he said will reduce operating costs for its fleet over the long run.

“Electric vehicles are the future of the automotive industry and that is why I have been pressing the Postal Service to purchase more of them,” said Peters, D-Mich.

The proposal, to be posted in the Federal Register on Thursday, came after 16 states, environmen­tal groups and a labor union sued to halt purchases of delivery vehicles under the initial plan that was skewed heavily toward gas-powered trucks.

purchases would focus on smaller amounts of vehicles in shorter intervals than the original 10-year environmen­tal analysis, officials said. The goal is to be more responsive to the Postal Service’s evolving operationa­l strategy, technology improvemen­ts and changing market conditions, the Postal Service said in a statement. A public hearing on the new proposal will be held next month.

The Postal Service was cleared to place the initial order with the manufactur­er, Wisconsin-based Oshkosh Defense, in late February after announcing it cleared a final administra­tive hurdle.

But a government watchdog testified in April that the Postal Service relied on false assumption­s as it evaluated the original plan.

This comes against a backdrop of U.S. automobile manufactur­ers expanding the number of EV models targeting the mainstream market.

Next-generation delivery vehicles are taller, which makes it easier for postal carriers to grab the packages. They also have improved ergonomics and climate control.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? The Postal Service now wants 50 percent of its initial 50,000 next-generation vehicles to be electric.
Associated Press file photo The Postal Service now wants 50 percent of its initial 50,000 next-generation vehicles to be electric.

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