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Earth Transportation United States

California Requires New City Buses To Be Electric by 2029 (nytimes.com) 142

California has became the first state to mandate a full shift to electric buses on public transit routes, flexing its muscle as the nation's leading environmental regulator and bringing battery-powered, heavy-duty vehicles a step closer to the mainstream. From a report: Starting in 2029, mass transit agencies in California will only be allowed to buy buses that are fully electric under a rule adopted by the state's powerful clean air agency. The agency, the California Air Resources Board, said it expected that municipal bus fleets would be fully electric by 2040. It estimated that the rule would cut emissions of planet-warming greenhouse gases by 19 million metric tons from 2020 to 2050, the equivalent of taking four million cars off the road. Environmental groups said the new regulation was an important step in cutting tailpipe emissions, which are a major contributor to global warming and California's notorious smog.
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California Requires New City Buses To Be Electric by 2029

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  • https://www.eia.gov/todayinene... [eia.gov]
    You do notice that this is from the U.S. goverment. Unbiased enough for you?

    n 2016, the California grid region, which covers most of the state and a small portion of Nevada, imported a net daily average of 201 million kilowatthours (kWh) throughout the year from other western regions, or about 26% of its average daily demand. Those imports were supplied by the other two regions that make up the Western Interconnect (WECC). The Northwest region of WECC, which includes mos
    • How much energy production is lost? With our power grid, we just can't turn it off if no one is using it, or dial it down to a point where the correct amount of electricity will come in Just in time. For the most part electric vehicles will be charged up over night, during lower energy demand and where these power plants are still turning generators and producing more power then needed.
      Sue with Electric Vehicles there will be more demand on the grid, and states may need to purchase more power, but I don't s

      • I see it as an all around problem for California. They are moving away from fossil fuels to electric. But they can not generate enough electricity to meet their current demands. The second link I provided is a breakdown of how they generate electricity, with coal being the smallest percentage(as I expected).
        But they are placing more reliance on Electricity which they do not have enough of.
        Did you notice that there is a high percentage of power being generated by hydro? Why couldn't California use i
      • And now that I am making my second/third pass at the article. This is talking NEW bus's, not all bus's. That actually is a good idea. Localities do not replace their fleet every year, they rotate out vehicles. So, working slowly to the solution.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by jeff4747 ( 256583 )

      Could you explain why California should never import electricity ever?

      And why this "must never import" position doesn't apply to all the food California exports to every other state?

  • I recall that just a few months ago California also tossed out all fossil fueled power generation plants in a similar move. I'm just curious how they figure on charging these new buses so they can actually use them?

    IF smog is your concern, do CNG powered buses. They run exceptionally clean and CNG generally doesn't require major changes to existing internal combustion engines to work.

    IF you are really serious about CO2 emissions, then your problem isn't city buses, but population density. You need to g

    • You need to get folks to live where they work

      Scattered coworking spaces and work-from-home with virtual offices.

      My new venture, Moonset Technologies (primary subsidiary: Secure Democratic Election Services), uses Google services with mandatory 2FA (security keys), Digital Ocean for hosting, and a local incubator coworking space. I'm all-in on video conferencing and do not require the board to all be in one room ever. If I need to hire an engineer in a region, then I can hire one.

      E-mail, documents, and other such things hosted by Google have Go

      • You need to get folks to live where they work

        Scattered coworking spaces and work-from-home with virtual offices.

        I can attest that this is fine for some kinds of work, but not for others. Close collaboration and team work suffers when people are not actually face to face, and working from say a "home office" hasn't been shown to be real good for productivity or information security. But it has it's place I suppose.

        Good luck with your venture, I wouldn't mind working for a San Francisco company at their wage scale from here in the Midwest and I wouldn't mind staying a few hours later each day to support communicatio

        • by DamonHD ( 794830 )

          I haven't paid office rent in 20-odd years for my own businesses, and when not working for myself my clients have been multinationals where you're simply not going to get everyone to commute to one place*, so distance working has to be dealt with anyway.

          A fact overlooked by the dev support dept of the NYC HQ of one of my clients which 'saved' money by not buying electronic copies of some critical documentation, and just kept one paper copy in NJ that we could all 'pop over' to read. Not that great for the

        • They often have regional pay scales. They'll gladly hire you to work there for less money then someone in an expensive area.

          • They often have regional pay scales. They'll gladly hire you to work there for less money then someone in an expensive area.

            LOL.. How's that fair?

            Actually, it's a seller's market for my kind of labor here right now. My salary is going up more than it did last year. I have a feeling I'm going to be making the same wages as my counter parts in San Francisco pretty soon. We are already seeing the massive real-estate price run up and a massive influx of folks from the better paid areas and wages are following that.

        • working from say a "home office" hasn't been shown to be real good for productivity or information security

          Virtual infrastructure and the whole Google platform provide for that. If you've connecting via VPN, then I have your home network plugged into my corporate LAN; whereas with e.g. Office365 and SharePoint Online or Gmail and Google Drive, there's no such bridge. Use a U2F Security Key to authenticate and you avoid credential theft. You can do most work from a Chromebook, which inherits the protection of a Chromebook (not being Windows, a strict security model, and containerization as a context partition

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Glad you asked.

      answer [supercaptech.com].

    • I recall that just a few months ago California also tossed out all fossil fueled power generation plants in a similar move.

      You really need to see someone about this memory issue. 'Cause that didn't happen.

      IF smog is your concern, do CNG powered buses.

      Still produces some smog-forming chemicals. Also, they're already in place. This is plan is about replacing those buses as they reach EOL.

      Also, it's not like this is hard to do. There's no new technology to invent. There's already cities that use 100% EV buses, and these cities are not small. So all that is needed is a reason to switch. And this regulation supplies that reason.

      • I recall that just a few months ago California also tossed out all fossil fueled power generation plants in a similar move.

        You really need to see someone about this memory issue. 'Cause that didn't happen.

        Maybe you missed this: https://www.powermag.com/calif... [powermag.com]

        IF smog is your concern, do CNG powered buses.

        Still produces some smog-forming chemicals. Also, they're already in place. This is plan is about replacing those buses as they reach EOL.

        Also, it's not like this is hard to do. There's no new technology to invent. There's already cities that use 100% EV buses, and these cities are not small. So all that is needed is a reason to switch. And this regulation supplies that reason.

        No, Not nearly as many. CNG is much cleaner as a motor fuel, especially diesel. Plus, with current emission standards, MOST newer gasoline powered vehicles are emitting cleaner vapors than they are ingesting when the air quality is bad. We have, at least in the USA, largely dealt with vehicle emissions and the production of smog. In fact, the majority of the problem is no longer vehicle emissions, but all the other things out there like law mower

        • Maybe you missed this

          Maybe you missed that it's not 2045 yet. So CA hasn't "tossed out all fossil fueled power generation plants" yet.

          Also, you'll note the 2045 thing is about formulating a plan to do it, not actually enacting any regulations. Hint: They're not going to hit the 2045 date.

          CNG is much cleaner as a motor fuel, especially diesel

          Which is why much of the buses in CA already run on it. Moving to EVs is the next step.

          Plus, with current emission standards, MOST newer gasoline powered vehicles are emitting cleaner vapors than they are ingesting when the air quality is bad

          You're talking about China air quality bad. CA's air quality is already good enough that vehicles are a net reduction in air quality.

          You still haven't addressed HOW the state is going to get enough electricity to charge all these batteries

          Yeah, it's too bad C

  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @01:04PM (#57817410) Homepage

    This will combine really well with increasing reliance on wind and solar power. Also electric buses if they are designed appropriately can when not being used directly as buses can have their batteries used as on-grid storage which can help smooth out fluxuations in the grid. Since buses also mostly have short distances traveled, it is easier for them to do their jobs on an electric system than cars, since the issue of short-range is less of a problem (the buses will always be near their recharge stations).

    The only real downsides are twofold: First, that the date is 2029 which is a decade away; I wish the time-range for the mandate was shorter. Second, as California switches to an electric system, other places may actually take the old gasoline buses which isn't necessarily a good thing. The energy involved in making new buses is high, so using a bus for as long as possible seems like a good idea, but there's a point where continuing to use it hits diminishing marginal returns. For example, Bangor, Maine has in the past gotten old buses for essentially free from some cities which were otherwise going to scrap them, but there's some argument that the reliability and efficiency is so poor of these old buses that it may have cost more overall to try to use them.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      2029 is not very ambitious. Shenzhen in China has been 100% electric busses for a few years now, and more than 80% of new busses in China are electric. Maybe they are waiting for US manufacturers to catch up rather than buy Chinese.

    • Perhaps look at the cost difficulties Germany is running into with regards to strict adherence to wind, solar and wave power for energy generation?

      There are diminishing returns energy-wise and economically speaking. And there still isn't a viable storage option, nor the availability for enough minerals for everyone's electricity usage/storage needs during periods of inclement or non-cooperative weather patterns or night-time use periods.

      Maybe it's time to invest in massive pipes made of room-temp supercond

    • San Fran was aiming for 2035. https://www.electrive.com/2018... [electrive.com]

    • First, that the date is 2029 which is a decade away; I wish the time-range for the mandate was shorter.

      I think it's because buying that many new buses is expensive, and cities don't have the money.

  • Needs to be sooner. Doesn't California at least have hybrid or natural gas buses already?
    • I think hybrid/natural gas is already in place in many places ... because it's also cheaper.

      But I think the first step would be to make public transport more attractive. Cutting the emissions of buses makes sense in Europe, but in the US, you need to first convince people to use them instead of their cars. That would actually have a net benefit on emissions.

      Adding constraints to public transportation is only going to make it less attractive, hence less used.

  • The article says the CO2 reduction over 30 years is the equivalent of taking 4 million cars off the road. But they don't do the math.

    The projected total reduction over 30 years is equal to the emissions of 4 million cars in 1 year, based on current emissions. But cars will change over the next 30 years too.

  • Buses have to make so many stops that regenerative braking would be a lot more advantageous on buses than on almost any other type of vehicle

    But if we want buses to be less detested even in cities that have a popular, comprehensive transit network, having fewer stops would be a big improvement. If you can take a bus, you can walk one block. I know urban dwellers who Uber-commute to a subway station every day because the bus takes two hours to go three miles.

    • They have express and local buses for this reason. Also you don't know how many blocks away someone walked to get to the road with all the bus stops.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Monday December 17, 2018 @02:37PM (#57818196)

    A great side benefit of this often not talked about, is now much urban noise pollution this reduces.

    Buses travel some roads regularly that are are not often travelled past some time in the evening, so to eliminate bus engine noise will really improve the lives of those that live along bus routes.

    The widespread switch to electric vehicles is going to be so much faster than anyone can possible imagine...

  • Can we spend money on electric busses instead of a bullet train to nowhere, from nowhere, routed through the middle of nowhere?

    • It's not through the middle of nowhere. It's through the densest corridor of population west of Texas. Almost all of the cities in California line up in a neat line connecting north and south through the central valley, and it's not that way by accident. It's because that's *where the railroads put them in the first place*. It makes sense to put HSR there, so you can connect the vast majority of California's population.

      I know if you drive down I-5 it looks like the valley is empty -- but that's because I-5

  • Who is going to pay for all this virtue signalling?
    The existing bus system has energy network that is able to cope with long distances traveled and hours.
    The many stops, in traffic all day. Start stop and short distance to the next stop.
    The same bus can do both types of city and suburban transport.

    The costs of replacing all existing support equipment and upgrading all support services?
    Staff having to learn new skills to work supporting each new bus?
    Whats the bus tax going to look like so a state c

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