Battery recharging times remain a major obstacle for electric vehicles. But perhaps not for long. Proterra claims that its new all-electric buses can recharge in as little as ten minutes.
Last week the company demonstrated one of its buses in San Jose (see the video below). Seattle and San Francisco are also considering buying the Proterra's buses.
In its "default configuration," the bus will travel 25 to 40 miles on a ten-minute charge, depending on the terrain, says the company.
But President and CEO Jeff Granato and Director of Business Development Joshua Goldman are careful to point out that since the buses are made to order, the "default configuration" varies according to the client and the planned use. How much battery goes into a bus "depends on how far the user wants vehicle to go," they told the Industry Standard in a phone interview. For instance, an airport-to-car-rental shuttle bus needs a smaller battery than a school bus.
The fast-charging, lithium-titanate battery cells are manufactured by Altairnano, a leader in the new technology, but the design and fast charger were conceived by Proterra, says Goldman.
As every long-term laptop owner knows, batteries eventually wear out and won't take a charge. But the Proterra executives insist that their batteries are exceptionally durable. They "potentially can outlast the life of the vehicle," they claim.
How much will these buses cost? A San Francisco Chronicle article reports that each bus will initially cost "around $2 million." Granato insists that that number is wrong, but was unable to discuss pricing.
Thanks to both energy costs and less moving parts (which results in less maintenance), electric vehicles are considerably cheaper to run than conventional ones.
Image: Proterra







"They 'potentially can outlast the life of the vehicle,' they claim." I call hogwash on that one. I'm not sure about this 35' composite vehicle, but FTA purchased buses have a required usable lifetime of 12 years. There is no way a lithium ion battery pack can last 12 years especially if it being charged "in 10 mins". What is that 2C, 4C, 8C charging rate? I'm all in favor of new battery technologies in transportation, it seems it's easier to get a bus than a car, but this really sounds like false marketing hype. As the technology progresses, it will be very important to manage customer's (and the public's) expectations otherwise the boulder we are trying to push up hill will become to big and overwhelm the true technological leaps.
-RL
Post new comment