In a bid to clean up its streets in more ways than one, the city of Madison, Wisconsin has added two Class 8 electric trucks to its garbage fleet earlier this year in the form of a pair of Mack Electric LR HDEVs … and the city already has plans to add two more.
In 2017, the city of Madison became the 25th North American city to set a zero-net carbon goal for for city operations by 2030 and the city as-a-whole by 2050. To that end, the city has begun electrifying its heavy truck and equipment fleet with the deployment of two Mack Electric LR HDEVs – reportedly the first two Class 8 BEVs to deployed in America’s dairy land.
“One of the reasons we’re going all-in on electrification is because it’s better for the environment,” explains Madison Mayor Satya Rhodes-Conway. “These refuse trucks hit every single block in the city of Madison. That is a lot of diesel fumes in our neighborhoods. If we can take even one diesel truck off of the streets … it is a win for our community.”
The big Class 8 Mack Trucks are powered by a pair of electric motors putting 400 combined kW (about 536 hp) through a 2-speed Mack Powershift transmission that offers a barely believable 4,051 lb-ft of peak torque output. That’s over 40% more power than the first generation LR Electric released in 2019 – and this iteration can charge the 376 kWh batteries fully in under two hours at 150 kW.
Top comment by Well-O
After having toyed with the idea of going CNG but never moving forward, the different city I live in debuted electric garbage trucks a few years ago.
They claim that each one saves them some 6000 gallons of diesel per year.
I don't remember the brand but it's not Mack. Good, the more the merrier.
Obviously for me the main advantage are that they're much quieter. Real nice, because the first one passes by our house before 6am...
The two trucks are charged overnight at the city’s truck depot, using a pair of ChargePoint-provided DCFC dispensers.
“Five years ago, Madison had no electric vehicles in its fleet,” continued Mayor Rhodes-Conway. “Today, we have more than 100 full electric vehicles, 150 hybrids, and, thanks to the Biden-Harris administration, 62 new electric buses that will serve our bus rapid transit system. Electrifying heavy-duty vehicles is on the forefront of zero-emissions technology. Madison will help demonstrate the performance of these new electric garbage trucks in real-world conditions and help quantify the long-term savings associated with eliminating fossil fuel costs and reducing maintenance expenses.”
Electrek’s Take
Municipalities all over the country are starting to understand that electric garbage trucks offer real advantages – and not just financial or environmental ones – that make life for people who live and work with and near them a whole lot better. Madison’s mayor obviously gets it, and these two Mack HDEVs will surely not be the last.
SOURCE | IMAGES: Mack Trucks, via Facebook.
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