海角大神

海角大神 / Text

London gets all-electric double-decker buses: Will the US follow suit?

The environmentally friendly buses will have no emissions, benefiting London air quality and raising the bar for public transit around the world. 

By Beatrice Gitau , Staff writer

The world's first purely electric double-decker bus will be tested in London this October, London Mayor Boris Johnson announced at the Clean Bus summit.聽

During the Clean Bus Summit聽held in London on June 29, representatives from 24 cities from around the world, including Madrid, Rio de Janerio, Johannesburg, Bogota, and Warsaw聽committed聽to roll out over 40,000 ultra-low emission buses by 2020.

London's new zero emission buses will run along Route 16, transporting passengers to some of London's biggest tourist attractions, including Hyde Park,聽the Hard Rock Cafe, and Buckingham Palace.

"The iconic red double-decker bus is about to become greener than ever," said聽Mayor Johnson. "I could not be more pleased that London will play host to these exciting pure electric double-deck buses, and I鈥檓 sure the lucky users of Route 16 will embrace it with gusto."

"London is a world leader in clean buses," he added. London has had pure聽electric single-deck buses since 2013, as well as hybrid electric double-decker buses for years.

The arrival of the pure electric double-decker bus, which can carry 81 passengers and has a battery range of 162 miles, is set to mark the next stage in the greening of London鈥檚 bus fleet, with the goal of reducing both toxic emissions into the London air and greenhouse gas production.

Since 2008, Transport for London (TfL) has rolled out more than 1,300 hybrid electric buses and retrofitted more than 1,400 buses to reduce their emissions by up to 88 percent.聽

The five new pure electric buses represent a "fantastic" step forward, but there's more to do, London Assembly transport spokesperson Valerie Shawcross聽told the BBC.聽"We need a plan to make environmentally friendly vehicles the rule, not the exception."

鈥淲orking together with our colleagues from around the world really is the best way to reach our common goal of reducing emissions,"聽said聽Sir Peter Hendy, London鈥檚 transport commissioner.

In the US, public transportation lags behind London's example, and it varies from city to city. Nationwide, industry experts聽report聽that 40.4 percent of US buses used alternative fuels or hybrid technology as of January 1, 2013.

In Dallas, seven pure electric buses are scheduled to go into service in early 2017, thanks to a federal grant. In San Francisco, a $500 million bond measure helped fund 60 pure electric trolleys and 61聽biodiesel-electric hybrid buses, unveiled on Earth Day 2015.

鈥淭ransit is an important part of growing healthy, vibrant communities,鈥 said Peter Varga, chair of the American Public Transportation Association. 鈥淓nvironmental stewardship and using our resources wisely is what public transportation is all about.鈥