Volvo Trucks turns on the electric LIGHTS project

Volvo Trucks turns on the electric LIGHTS project

Two years, $44.8 million and 16 partners came together in the Volvo Trucks North America LIGHTS project to bring not just the Volvo electric VNR to market, but a holistic electric truck strategy—from charging infrastructure to electric truck maintenance.

Peter-Voorhoeve-president-Volvo-Trucks-North-America-electric-truck-LIGHTS-project-WEB

Several presenters took the stage during the opening remarks, including:

  • Martin Lundstedt, president and chief executive officer, Volvo Group
  • Peter Voorhoeve, president, Volvo Trucks North America
  • Dave Thompson, president, TEC Equipment
  • Lars Stenqvist, chief technology officer, Volvo Group
  • Barbara Riordan, board member, California Air Resources Board
  • Brett Pope, director of electromobility, Volvo Trucks North America

You can listen to the entire presentation below, but here are a few key takeaways:

• The Fontana, Calif., TEC Equipment location has installed electric charging infrastructure and will service approximately 15 electric VNRs.

• Lundstedt: “Forty percent of all imports go through the ports of California. … California is one of the most progressive in driving sustainability.” He also drew the parallel between the investment in safety technology in the 1960s to today’s investment in sustainability, and acknowledged that the ROI on the investment can be difficult to see, but that it will come because it’s an investment that needs to be made. “Profit is important. We need to fund the future.”

• Lundstedt calls Volvo’s ’60s-era development of safety equipment the “spirit” of the Volvo LIGHTS project quoting: “I take my hat off for everything that has been achieved, but I take my jacket off and roll up my sleeves for everything we have to do together.”

• Stenqvist: “The speed of battery development will be decisive for the uptake of electric vehicles. Battery cost is important. Battery density is important. But it’s also important how you use the batteries in your vehicles…. I have three teams working on three different generations of batteries. We will go through two generations in the LIGHTS project phase.”

• Voorhoeve: “I personally believe that electromobility is the way forward. Why do I believe that? There is a society and environment push for sustainability. It’s not a Power Point bullet point. Our customers and our customers’ customers are pushing for green solutions.”

• Voorhoeve: “The LIGHTS Project is a perfect partnership and without that battery electric trucks will not happen…. We need to make sure we get the scale to get electric trucks on the road. We want electric trucks on renewable energy.”

• By the end of the year, Volvo Trucks will sell the electric VNR and ramp up production for 2021. It will be produced at the New River Valley plant in Virginia. Limited production by the end of this year.

• Voorhoeve: Fleets can start today by talking with utility providers to find out what it will take to install their own charging structure.

Volvo-Electric-Truck-VNR-Under-the-Hood

• Pope highlighted a few aspects of the electric VNR: it is up to 6 dB quieter inside the cab compared to a diesel VNR; it sports a modular power box in an engine-like arrangement so that Volvo can build the product on its main production line; and has a charging port on the driver’s side so that the driver has better charging awareness.

• Pope: Electric truck application targets include local distribution, regional distribution, construction, regional haul, long haul, rolled out over time in that order. “Growing into long haul is our ultimate objective.”

Listen to the Volvo LIGHTS Project opening remarks

You May Also Like

ACT Research predicts ‘year of transition’ as trailer orders fall in March

ACT says while softer order activity still meets expectations, net orders remain challenged by weak profitability for for-hire truckers.

ACT-Research-US-Trailer-Net-Orders-Prelim-April

According to ACT Research, preliminary net trailer orders fell nominally from February to March. At 13,600 units, orders were also down 24% compared to last March 2023. ACT adds that seasonal adjustment (SA) at this point in the cycle leaves March’s tally essentially unchanged at 13,800 units. This, ACT said, matches predictions of a "year of transition" in the industry,

Mercedes-Benz eActros 600 completes winter trials

Tested in the cold of Finland, and the heat of Spain, Mercedes-Benz says the BEV eActros 600 is slated to launch at the end of the year.

Mercedes-Benz-eActros-completes-winter-trials
Inside the most secret building at Volvo Trucks

What’s no secret is the importance of trucking safety, and Volvo’s goal to reduce accidents across the globe.

Volvo-Trucks-Global-Safety
PrePass comes to four new states, adds 116 sites

With this expansion, the PrePass Safety Alliance says fleets with the PrePass app now have 20 percent more bypass sites nationwide.

PrePass-logo-large
XL Specialized Trailers launches Knight MFG trailer

The Knight, a 48-ft.-long detachable gooseneck lowboy with an overall capacity of 80,000 lbs., is now available form XL dealers.

XL-Specialized-Trailers-Knight

Other Posts

Autocar, Rocsys bring hands-free charging to EV fleets

The chargers use soft robotics, computer vision technology and AI to help ensure successful plug-ins.

Autocar-Rocsys-hands-free-charging
Where you see the safety, connectivity benefits in the latest truck equipment

As connectivity improves, so does safety. Take a look at the technologies in Volvo’s all-new VNL that mitigate risk in the cab, and on the road.

All-new-Volvo-VNL-Connectivity
Why fuel filtration science matters

Fleetguard shares the story of filtration science leading to a biodiesel solution with a seven-time increase in performance.

The trucking life of the internal combustion engine going forward

A glimpse into the fossil-free future of truck engines that run on everything from biodiesel to natural gas to hydrogen.

volvo-fuel-cell-1400