Competition grows to charge electric trucks

Less than 1% of charging needed is already in place

FreightWaves Midwest Bureau Chief Alan Adler interviews Sam Arons, vice president of business development at Gage Zero during the FreightWaves Enterprise Fleet Summit.

This fireside chat recap is from FreightWaves’ Enterprise Fleet Summit on Wednesday.

FIRESIDE CHAT TOPIC: Electrifying your fleet through innovative finance models.

DETAILS: Charging for electric trucks trails the availability of battery-powered equipment. Startups like Gage Zero have the investor backing to buy the real estate and develop the large-scale sites. But will they be enough to support the transition to electrification?

KEY QUOTES FROM SAM ARONS, vice president of business development at Gage Zero:


“It’s important to take a step back and think about how big this problem is. The rough number we’re talking about is like $100 billion of investment in charging infrastructure that’s needed over the next 10 to 20 years.”

“Even in a state like Texas, which doesn’t have nearly as many incentives as California does, we are seeing today that TCO (total cost of ownership) is roughly even with a diesel truck but over the next 10 years, that’s going to come down quite dramatically.”

“You need to find the perfect nexus of a good location from a trucking route perspective. … You also need to find a place that has a pretty decent amount of power that’s available now and a clear path to a much larger amount of power a couple of years down the road as this industry grows.”


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