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Transportation United States

USPS Expects To Only Buy Electric Delivery Vehicles Starting in 2026 (engadget.com) 183

The United States Postal Service said it expects to buy more than 66,000 electric vehicles by the end of 2028 in a significant change from previous plans. From a report: In February, the USPS said it would purchase 5,000 fully electric versions of the Next Generation Delivery Vehicle, with gas-powered trucks accounting for the remaining 45,000 of the initial order. After pushback from the Biden administration and resistance to that from the USPS, the agency has gradually increased the proportion of EVs in the order.

Now, the postal service aims to buy at least 60,000 Next Generation Delivery Vehicles by 2028, at least 75 percent of which will be electric models. Starting in 2026, the USPS expects that all NGDV acquisitions will be electric versions. The NGDVs are expected to start operating on delivery routes late next year. In addition, the agency plans to buy another 21,000 off-the-shelf EVs through 2028. Overall, the USPS plans to buy 106,000 delivery vehicles by the end of 2028 to start replacing its aging, inefficient and not-as-safe fleet of more than 220,000 vehicles. That means the agency still expects to buy around 40,000 gas-powered models over the next six years. The USPS said in a statement that the feasibility of fully electrifying the fleet "will continue to be explored." However, it believes there will be more EV availability in the future, which will certainly help.

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USPS Expects To Only Buy Electric Delivery Vehicles Starting in 2026

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  • by ZipprHead ( 106133 ) on Tuesday December 20, 2022 @02:13PM (#63145362) Homepage

    EVs are perfect for all those short haul, stop/starting all the time trips.

    What in the hell took them so long to come to their senses?

    • by Omega Hacker ( 6676 ) <[omega] [at] [omegacs.net]> on Tuesday December 20, 2022 @02:19PM (#63145390)
      One word: DeJoy.
      • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Tuesday December 20, 2022 @02:44PM (#63145460)

        The mission for almost all of Trump's high level appointees was to:
        - Prove that government was inefficient by doing a terrible job
        - Destroy the departments from within
        There were big name anti-federalists whispering in Trump's ears, and this has been a goal of theirs for decades.

        The USPS has long been one of the better run government services, often paying for its own budget, and this infuriates the anti government people who want to privatize literally everything (including the military). DeJoy was their wet dream.

        • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

          by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )
          Yep, motherfucker (and his cronies "Delta Dick" Anderson and Flynn) also tried to kill Amtrak ... instead of putting idled employees on part pay to retain them, they let them go or offered buyouts. Why? To make restoring service post COVID (everyone knew the pandemic would end eventually) more difficult. They're still not running NYC to DC trains past 7-8pm on most days, when the last service prior to COVID was 9-10pm. Meanwhile, public transport in non-UK Europe is mostly back to normal.
          • Amtrak is not a good example here though. They were a bunch of bloody awful and incompetent tossers who couldn't hack it even before COVID. Perhaps a better way to handle them would have been to fire the entirely benighted lot and contract any of the regional JR operators from Japan to rebuild Amtrak from the ground up. (JR, or Japan Rail, are the operators of, amongst others, the Yamanote line in Tokyo and the various Shinkansen.). And if JR isn't interested, the TGV and ICE, from France and Germany re

            • We tried that with Keolis, which is basically run by SNCF, which is France's national rail company. They had a contract to run MBTA commuter rail in Boston and they still failed due to a very different labor and regulatory environment here in the US. Anyway the way to improve Amtrak wasn't by deliberately crippling it further. Save! Our! Trains!
        • Part of it was that competent people didn't want to work for Trump. And if they did (out of a sense of civic duty), then they were treated poorly by Trump, and abused by the opposition party, like Bill Barr.

      • "DeJoy to the world;
        Your package wont come.
        You wont / receive / a thing."

        oldie but goodie. sad that its still true even 3 years later.

    • by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Tuesday December 20, 2022 @02:25PM (#63145410)
      EVs are prefect for delivery, because the exact mileage needed is pretty well known before the start of the trip. Easy to keep enough power in reserve. Also, the USPS has pretty extensive real estate holdings with plenty of fenced-in parking to build charging infrastructure in. I wouldn't say EVs work for every application, but for mail delivery, they are a much most cost effective solution than ICE, at least for the areas where gas is much more expensive than electricity, like Oregon.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      What in the hell took them so long to come to their senses?

      Lobbyists and a political party with an aversion to change.

      But the grid can't handle the capacity!

      Sounds like the free market to me. Customer demand will drive grid upgrades. You have a product that customers are demanding more of? Oh no what a problem for a company to have.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        And then the environmentalists will sue to require decades of studies and planning to ensure new transmission lines and power generation plants do not impact any insects.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Unlikely. All the major environmental groups, i.e. the ones with enough funding for serious lawsuits, have been pushing for building new infrastructure for decades.

          Greenpeace first started publishing its 100% renewable grid engineering studies back in the 2000s.

  • But my mail carrier drives 400 miles uphill both ways every single day and an EV can't possibly work for them!

    Yes that may be true. But the vast majority of mail routes are fixed with many stops and starts. Textbook case for an EV. So yes in certain situations an EV may not be best, and that's ok.

    • There are a few routes that are long and occur in locations where it's very cold and they need to have chains on the tires. Those will be hard to manage with EVs, for the other routes EVs will be fine.

      The longest route from my post office Is 75 miles, so if the vehicle can manage that at -10 F with chains on the wheels and say 6" of new snow, there is the benchmark the EV needs to meet.

  • How about having once a week free delivery and if you want it sooner, pay for it or go to the post office and pick it up.

  • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Tuesday December 20, 2022 @02:41PM (#63145454)
    Goes back to a post office parking lot that can have charging equipment installed several times a day, stop-and-go usage.
  • Instead of spending a lot of money on electric vehicles how about Congress passes a law allowing people to opt out of junk mail?

    For me personally, probably 80% of the mail I receive is junk mail that goes immediately into the trash and eventually a landfill site somewhere. While electric vehicles are better for the environment, cutting down trees to make paper that goes to the trash pile isn't.

    Let's suppose for a moment that I get more junk mail than the average person. Instead of 80% maybe 50% is a better

  • With the original order the cost was about $36k/vehicle, but if the mix went from 10% EV to 90% EV it went up to about $60k/vehicle https://insideevs.com/news/490... [insideevs.com]

    According to this: https://www.greatbusinessschoo... [greatbusinessschools.org] they drive about 5300 miles/year.
    On that basis it will take many years to break even on pre-purchasing $24k in fuel.

    • by necro81 ( 917438 )
      Any idea how long the USPS holds onto vehicles? Decades. That's plenty long enough to recoup fuel costs.

      Missing from your time-to-breakeven is any mention of the fact that EVs have much lower maintenance costs. Fewer parts to break. Fewer fluids to worry about. The motor and (fixed, single-speed) transmission are good practically forever. Brakes are used less heavily (pretty significant for stop-and-go cargo carriers). And so on.
  • Do mail carriers drive their vehicles home at night, like some police do? Will they be expected to plug it in at their home and pay for the power? Just askin.
    • Have you ever seen a postal truck? Would you want that in your driveway? No, they are parked at the post office where they are maintained overnight. Personal vehicles are used for some rural routes where the carriers are reimbursed for mileage. But for any of the urban/suburban routes where EVs make sense, they aren't taken home at night.

The solution of this problem is trivial and is left as an exercise for the reader.

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