BT and Eon join EV100, pledge to electrify fleet by 2030

0

BT and Eon have pledged to electrify their fleets by 2030. The two are among a number of companies that have signed up to the EV100 initiative, joining the likes of EDF, Heathrow Airport, Ikea, Unilever and Vattenfall.

The Climate Group, which oversees the RE100 where business pledge to buy renewable power, is behind the EV100 programme.

CEO Helen Clarkson said the economic opportunities presented by electrification are “vast” and emphasised that “every major company and government should be switching to electric transport”. Doing so, she added, “will channel investment into smarter energy infrastructure”.

BT Group has a fleet of around 34,000 vehicles. It has committed to switch to EVs where it is technically and economically possible. Where it is not, it will aim to deploy other low emission vehicles.

Energy company Eon said it will switch its entire fleet to EVs and install charging infrastructure at 100 offices. The company is already building out an EV charging network across Europe. Head of e-mobility Andreas Pfeiffer said Eon will “invest heavily” to support business customers switch their fleets to EVs.

See the list of EV100 members here.

Related stories:

Corporates driving PPA boom, says RE100

BT procurement chief: Convergence is coming, energy managers must articulate impacts

Eon boss: Decarbonising power is done, now for heat and transport

Pubs the new petrol stations?

Sir Terry Leahy on EVs, infrastructure and pitching to the board

Chargepoint raises £189m to fund EV charging infrastructure

Total partners with Chargepoint to bundle energy and EVs to businesses

Bring forward zero carbon transport target, MPs urge

Octopus backs flex and EVs for growth

Energy managers to become fleet managers

EV boom no sweat, says National Grid

Flexitricity chief: UK has enough spare power electrify every car on the road

Nissan: Vehicle to grid services will not drain EV batteries

Pivot makes huge play for 2GW storage and EV charging network

‘Land grab’ for EV car parks and revenue

National Grid predicts huge solar growth, while EVs create huge storage capacity

Click here to see if you qualify for a free subscription to the print magazine, or to renew.

Follow us at @EnergystMedia. For regular bulletins, sign up for the free newsletter.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here