On the Road to Net Zero

How B.C. can pave the way for zero-emission commercial vehicles across Canada

Key Takeaways

  • Commercial transportation is responsible for a quarter of all climate pollution in B.C. Tweet this
  • Diesel trucks and buses emit a disproportionate amount of air pollution, and electrifying just 10 last-mile delivery trucks has the same benefit as 56 households buying an electric car. Tweet this
  • Lower fuel and maintenance costs can add up to big savings for businesses. In California, the price of charging a small fleet of step vans is about a third of the price of fuelling similar vans with diesel. Tweet this
  • Informed by a roundtable of industry experts, On the Road to Net Zero outlines ways that governments, utilities, and the private sector can pave a smoother road ahead for commercial EVs across the Lower Mainland—and ultimately across Canada. Tweet this

Executive Summary

B.C. is Canada’s undisputed electric car leader, where one in every five vehicles sold is now electric. There’s just one problem: most transport emissions in the province come from commercial vehicles like big rigs and delivery vans.

In order to better understand both the opportunities and challenges unique to the commercial transport sector, Clean Energy Canada convened industry stakeholders and experts to advise on accelerating the adoption of commercial EVs throughout B.C.’s Lower Mainland, the results of which inform a new report, On the Road to Net Zero: How B.C. can pave the way for zero-emission commercial vehicles across Canada.

B.C. has a long history of pioneering climate policies that are eventually adopted nationally or by other provinces, and with its pre-existing EV advantage, population density, abundant clean electricity, and political environment (B.C. has its own zero-emission target for commercial trucks), the Lower Mainland is a natural building point for a bigger wave of adoption to come.

As for how we get there, the participants convened this spring wished to see government support programs streamlined, better coordination with electric utilities, more pilots to act as case studies, and better data collection.

A successful strategy would also start with the trips most easily electrified—such as last-mile deliveries, short-haul trucking, garbage services, and drayage—where the required vehicle types are more available and cost-competitive.

For a deeper dive, On the Road to Net Zero outlines a number of ways that governments, utilities, and the private sector can pave a smoother road ahead for commercial EVs across the Lower Mainland—and ultimately across Canada.

Read On the Road to Net Zero now

Download the full report