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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Trials held into new future of delivery vehicles

Warwick Manufacturing Group is working with Transport for West Midlands on the project which could see EVs being used for deliveries

West Midlands Mayor Richard Parker drives a Stuyf low-speed electric pickup vehicle which is being trialled at University of Warwick

Trials are being held for a new electric vehicle cargo delivery system.

Warwick Manufacturing Group, based at University of Warwick, is working on the designs which it is hoped will one day replace petrol and diesel delivery vans.

Funding from the West Midlands Innovation Programme - part of the region's Innovation Accelerator - is being used by the so-called Last Mile Logistics Project to turn the university's campus into a testbed for a small fleet of low-speed electric delivery vehicles.

Researchers want to work with the Department for Transport to see how the data and learnings from the trials can help understand the barriers to making these vehicles legal to use on º£½ÇÊÓÆµ roads and cycle lanes.

As the trials progress, the project team will also champion the region and its established automotive supply chain to help to establish the West Midlands as an assembly hub for this new type of vehicle, creating local jobs.

The Last Mile Logistics Project is a partnership between the university and Transport for West Midlands.

West Midlands Mayor Richard Parker said: "The West Midlands has led transport innovation for centuries - from Watt's steam engine to the first bicycle and petrol car.