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Transportation Power

USPS Starts Nationwide Electric Vehicle Fleet (cbsnews.com) 86

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CBS News: The U.S. Postal Service's plans for a nationwide fleet of electric vehicles are getting closer to being realized. The service awarded contracts on Tuesday for 9,250 battery electric vehicles and for more than 14,000 charging stations. The vehicles purchased are Ford E-Transit Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs), which according to USPS are "100 percent electric." It's part of the agency's plans, announced in December, to make 75% of its newly acquired vehicles, known as Next Generation Delivery Vehicles, over the next five years electric. After 2026, NGDV purchases will be 100% electric, the agency said. The goal is to have a fleet of 66,000 electric vehicles deployed by 2028.

Three suppliers were awarded contracts for more than 14,000 charging stations, as well, USPS said, to kick off its Electric Vehicle Supply Equipment (EVSE) inventory. However, the agency did note that the contracts they just awarded will not provide an immediate supply. The vehicles won't be delivered until December, assuming that the agency successfully finishes its Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement and other necessary tasks. It also remains unclear where the vehicles and charging stations will be placed, as those details have yet to be finalized, the agency said.

As such, a contract has also been awarded for the agency to acquire 9,250 commercial-off-the-shelf internal combustion engine vehicles "to fill the urgent need for vehicles." In December, the agency said that 21,000 COTS vehicles will be purchased and are "expected to be battery electric," but said that depends "on market availability and operational feasibility." In this case, the internal combustion engine vehicles will be gas-powered and made by Fiat Chrysler Automobile, a spokesperson for USPS told CBS News. They added that, unlike older USPS vehicles, these will "feature air conditioning and advanced safety technology and are more suited to modern day operational requirements."
"We have an urgent need to replace some of our vehicles as soon as possible, and in those instances we will look to obtain vehicles that can be provided to us expeditiously, recognizing that there are a limited amount of BEV options currently available and that the charging infrastructure buildout will also take some time," they said in an email.

"...Today there remain routes and applications which do not support BEVs. As BEV technology matures and capabilities increase, the Postal Service will continue to review its ability to utilize and expand BEV usage."
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USPS Starts Nationwide Electric Vehicle Fleet

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  • USPS biofueled fleet (Score:4, Interesting)

    by dsgrntlxmply ( 610492 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @08:48AM (#63335219)
    9-mile mule train. [usps.com] Note that the URL says 8 miles but the article says 9.
    • by Merk42 ( 1906718 )
      An edge case where ICE vehicles won't work? Ugh why are we using them at all for anyone else then??? Anything should service 100% of the people 100% of the time, or it's worthless!
    • I assumed I'd see an article about a line of mules 9 miles long. I was disappointed to find the route is 9 miles long instead.

  • Considering that the current 'fleet' of vehicles delivering USPS out in my area consist of a couple of early 2000s voyager minivans converted to right-hand drive, I'm guessing I'll see these EVs approximately never.
  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Thursday March 02, 2023 @09:09AM (#63335273)

    The USPS delivery fleet has been long overdue for an upgrade, my local letter carrier is riding around in a vehicle that's over 20 years old and from what I can tell is badly maintained. Still, there are 45 of these in the fleet at the local post office and I'm wondering how they'll get enough Kwh in terms of supply and charging stations to handle that many overnight. Right now the letter carrier just drives to the onsite gas pump and then goes and does the route, so the logistical changes along with workplace scheduling will be something fun to watch. Why? Unions usually have great clauses in their CBAs about changes to workplace practices and the Postal Workers Union will probably want a significant study into how this impacts their members before signing off on anything.

    • I love how you manage to bitch about both electric vehicles and unions in the same post. As others have pointed out the average mail vehicle drives 20 miles a day and these new models have a range of 120. Why do all the naysayers think every vehicle will be charged from flat to 100% nightly? Do you burn a full tank of gas every day?

      • I live on a rural delivery route. It's over 15 miles to the nearest town with a PO for me. I was not bitching about unions but CBAs usually are very specific about work rules and procedures; if you change what the workers day to day responsibilities and procedures are, they can come back and ask for adjustments. It's standard practice.

        If you've ever been involved in trying to get technology into workplaces you'd understand. When PTT networks (NEXTEL) came out there was a big push to get off of Motor

        • Using some rough calculations- if the fleet of 45 vehicles was swapped to electric- going by another post that said the average mileage of USPS routes is 24 miles per day. Lots of stop and go, but not a lot of high speed, so make a generous rough estimate of 500Wh/mile. 540KWh per night. Assume 12 hours, and the charging is spread evenly over those 12 hours- 45KW - 187A. Close to the edge for a household circuit, which in the US is most often 200A service. With the assumption that a post office is likely in

        • You're an outlier. They can use Stanley Steamers with dual attached always-on flamethrowers to cover your route and the ones like it, and still be much more efficient on the whole by using EVs for the rest.

    • how they'll get enough Kwh in terms of supply and charging stations to handle that many overnight.

      This is a couple days work for an electrician I imagine. I don't have the stats on thee trucks requirements but let's even say each one needs 20A@208V, so 900A total so they will likely need 2 3-phase 600A installs with sub panels, receptacles, etc. (I am not en electrician so if we have one here who would like to school my napkin math, have at it)

      Now this is definitely work but it's not all that uncommon for commerical buildings and it's replacing the gas infrastructure as well which also requires mainte

    • by canavan ( 14778 )

      Right now the letter carrier just drives to the onsite gas pump and then goes and does the route, so the logistical changes along with workplace scheduling will be something fun to watch.

      So you think the unions will insist that their members continue handling toxic, flammable substances?

      • probably not but knowing work rules under CBAs, they'll probably want full training, cost, and schedule adjustments if their members are required to charge the vehicles.

  • Weâ(TM)ll looks everyone did rush out to buy doing the supply shock. I am sure tax payers got an amazing deal.
  • Then they will wish they had a nice warm internal combustion engine to snuggle up to, and batteries dont do so good in cold conditions
    • Yeah everyone driving a Tesla or Bolt goes without heat every winter. Some days there isn’t enough battery power to make it out of the garage!

    • Heat pump, heated seat, and a heated steering wheel. Heat pump can also condition the batteries in both winter and summer! This is a solved problem.
      • Heat pump can also condition the batteries in both winter and summer!

        Modern electric auto batteries are hysterically efficient, but horsepower requires a similarly hysterical amount of electricity. (A thousand watts is only 1 1/3 HP.) So once they're up to temperature keeping them warm is not an issue even in the coldest climates, and there are a number of hacks to heat them after an overnight "cold soak", such as using the motor controllers (which also brings the motors to a better operating temperature)

    • and batteries dont do so good in cold conditions

      I know. I've been trying to tell Tesla drivers in Finland this for years but they just won't listen to me!

  • None of this will improve the usps.

    My mail will still go two doors down, and I'll get their mail.

    My mail carrier will still insist into ramming an obviously too-large package into a standard mailbox, pulling back and forth with such vigor that she unseated the concrete base. Now I have to re-pour the base. Thanks, lazy fat slob of a mail carrier diversity hire. This is what happens when you go by quota and not merit.

    And while this electrification is great for high-density urban and city, let's see how it

    • The USPS service is shitty? Well you pay people too little to give a fuck and this is the result. Same deal with fast food service being terrible the past few years. $15 an hour still isn’t enough to deal with Karens and other shitty people day in and day out.

    • So your local service sucks, and you do nothing about it? Oh I see your argument deteriorated into political, climate, AND corporate corruption rambles. How about we stay off your lawn and you stay off ours, ok?
      • My local post office looks, smells and works like some third world shithole.

        Nothing I as a person can do about it other than smash the Frowny button on the "how did we do today" kiosk thingy on the way out.

        And the "why" this is so is ENTIRELY political. Hiring practices. Training practices. All political and hugely so.

    • I have to say, "lazy slob" and "with such vigor" that she managed to break your box doesn't really go together.

      And while this electrification is great for high-density urban and city, let's see how it plays out in bumfuck North Dakota or Wyoming Rural Routes. In March.

      The article says 75% of the fleet. How much do you want to bet that they've already decided to hold off there?

      The virtue-signaling in this endeavor saddens me deeply.

      It isn't virtue signaling, it's cost saving. They can get and operate custom electric vehicle for less overall money than they can gasoline ones. The electrics promise lower fuel costs, lower maintenance costs*, etc...

      *Keep in mind that stop and go driving is perfectly fine for EVs, but

  • NO matter the outcome, the effort will produce valuable insights. I am real curious what the commercial usage on the batteries will do. I suspect it will be fine based on Electric Bus efforts.
    • Very good point. The USPS is in the top 6 employers in the US -- 600k employees. They have offices everywhere, so you can work the data everywhere and not have missing data based on location. Yes -- this will be a really good data source.

  • Does anybody know how much additional electric power generation these will require ? How many post offices will need their grid connections increased to handle the load when all these vehicles plug in at the same time ? ( in the evening when the sun isn't shining on all those solar panels ) I suppose the mail just won't get delivered the next time California issues a 'do not charge your EV due to brown out conditions' warning. EVs are fine until a lot of people get one and then we have grid problems. It to
    • OK, here goes: the US consumed 8.7e6 barrels/day in Oct 2022. Each barrel is 42 gallons, and a gallon of gas has the heat equivalent of 33.7kWh. 12e9 kWh usage per day. In the US, found an estimate that the annual total miles driven is 3.2e12, so the daily is about 8.8e9 miles. So, from that- the average energy usage (assuming all the miles were gasoline driven) - 1.4kWh per mile.

      The main reason we have EVs today is that they are massively more efficient typically in the range of 0.25kWh/mile - so the same

      • Thanks for the reply. That's the information I was wondering/worried about. I was afraid that it would amount to a larger percentage than that.
    • Actually depends how far they have to go.

      If each vehicles does 50 miles, at 2 miles per KwH (likely they will do a LOT better than this) - each vehicle requires recharge of 25 kWh over 12 hours. A standard outlet would cover most of that (even a US one at 120V),

      Many industrial/commercial properties (in the UK at least) have 3-phase electricity ... so we are talking many vehicles drawing 3kW over the night ... and if you have to use local renewables (sun doesn't shine at night) then ... there's batteries ...

    • Does anyone know whether these can help stabilize the local grid when they're not in use?

  • https://www.ranlytics.com/comp... [ranlytics.com] -- "Ranlytics accurately maps cellular coverage on every street and road near Seattle".

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