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PRIVACY
Opinion

Move to electric power needs to consider HGVs

Battery power used for buses cannot be used on long-distance HGVs because of the higher weight and distance

The new Yutong E12 zero emissions electric bus, which is added to the Cardiff bus fleet, and introduced the city streets. (Image: WalesOnline/Rob Browne)

The Welsh Government decision in 2021 to include transport in its new Ministry of Climate Change was met with surprise and some scepticism. Wales was the first European country to make climate change the responsibility of a specific minister and so consider climate change as a primary criterion in transport policy and planning.

Transport had until then been seen by the Welsh Government as related to inward investment and employment particularly in a country on the edge of Europe and, unfortunately, outside the European Union market. Wales had lost its preferred EU investment grant position to the accession states of eastern EU. I saw this happen when working on EU projects between 1991 and 2010; it was quite understandable that transport investment would transfer to those states because it is a ‘top-4’ criterion for inward investment which the EU directed towards lower GDP per head countries.

It seemed our government had lost its way. However, that foresight now reflects changing conditions internationally.

While we still need inward investment, some forecasters suggest the world’s natural resources depletion rate may make future life on earth exceptionally difficult. Compared to my visit to the Peru / Amazon rainforest in 1984 with its thick forestation, the reports now being received show substantial depletion of a major means of carbon dioxide reduction.

Car manufacturers for some years toyed with electric car development but changes in diesel and petrol vehicle legislation have stimulated their research and production investment’. However these will only convert into air pollution reduction through increased production and consequent reduction in sales prices.

The international electric car market has been dominated by Tesla (0.9m electric cars produced in 2021; up from only 2,600 in 2012). However this month two of the world’s biggest car manufacturers, Ford Motor Company and Volkswagen (VW), have announced major changes in production.

VW began developing electric cars in 1970 and their current advertising says clearly that ’their future is electric’. Its high-performance R-brand cars (one of which, I admit, is my Scirocco) will become all-electric by 2030 and Klaus Zellmer (Passenger Sales Director) is reported as saying VW will end petrol/diesel car production in Europe by 2033. Last year, VW produced 8.9m cars including 0.3m electric vehicles