Postal Service Begins Testing Electric Vehicles

February 1, 2010

The U.S. Postal Service has the largest civilian fleet of vehicles in the country. It is ripe for conversion to electric power

The Postal Service is already testing an electric scooter.

That’s because the daily requirements of postal vehicles match well with the current capabilities of lithium ion batteries. The average vehicle drives 20 or so miles a day and stops between 500 and 700 times. That means its daily duties fall well within the range of an inexpensive, low power battery.

It also means each a vehicle is able to send significant power back to the battery through the use of a “regenerative” system that generates electricity from braking.

The cars and trucks in addition are free to recharge at night when power demand is low and utilities have the power to spare.

Several bills are before Congress with demands the service buy tens of thousands of electric vehicles over the next five years. Testing has already begun. Four companies have been selected to deliver vehicles to the service for one-year trials in Washington, D.C. Broad deployment is to follow.

Among those supplying vehicles is Quantum Fuel Systems.

Electric vehicles are not new to the Postal Service. Already it has been testing an electric scooter in several cities in Florida, California and Arizona. The scooter has a 40-mile range and costs 4 cents a mile to operate.

The USPS also has vehicles that run on hydrogen fuel cells, propane, ethanol and biodiesel. None are likely to proper quite the electrics.


Headquarters For GE Wind Business Has Solar Energy But No Wind Turbines

February 1, 2010

It makes sense that a company serving the alternative energy business should have a headquarters that reflects the values of the green movement: energy conservation, resource efficiency and renewable fuels.

Teh $45 million redesign comes with efficient air conditioning, water heating, larger windows and preferred parking for hybrids

It’s similar to the head of Tesla Motors diving an electric car. (What about that?)

This was the idea behind the revamped headquarters for GE’s wind turbine and renewable energy business. The $45 million redesign features solar power and reduced water consumption. But one key element is missing.

The company that claims to be the largest supplier of wind turbines in North America, with $6 billion in global revenue and 13,500 turbines installed around the world, has no turbines spinning actively on site.

In a Monday press release, GE said its Renewable Energy Global headquarters in Schenectady, NY, has low-flow faucets, improved insulation, an efficient hot water heater and air conditioning system, larger windows, bike racks and preferred parking for hybrid vehicles. It also has a 48 KW solar system providing power to the facility. But no wind turbines.

So, maybe Elon Musk doesn’t drive a Roadster.


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