City
Epaper

Amazon to invest over 1 bn euros to electrify delivery fleet in Europe

By IANS | Updated: October 11, 2022 10:35 IST

San Francisco, Oct 11 E-commerce giant Amazon has announced that it will invest more than one billion euros ...

Open in App

San Francisco, Oct 11 E-commerce giant Amazon has announced that it will invest more than one billion euros to further electrify its transportation fleet across Europe over the next five years.

The company said it is using thousands of zero-emission vehicles across its European operations, and this investment will add thousands more, accelerating Amazon's progress toward becoming net-zero carbon by 2040 10 years ahead of the Paris Agreement.

"Our transportation network is one of the most challenging areas of our business to decarbonise, and to achieve net-zero carbon will require a substantial and sustained investment," said Andy Jassy, Amazon CEO.

Amazon has more than 3,000 electric vans delivering packages to customers across Europe and expects to grow its fleet to more than 10,000 by 2025.

"Deploying thousands of electric vans, long-haul trucks, and bikes will help us shift further away from the traditional fossil fuels," he said in a statement late on Monday.

The investment is also intended to drive innovation across the industry and encourage more public charging infrastructure, which will help enable the broader transportation industry to more quickly reduce emissions.

Amazon has launched micro-mobility hubs in more than 20 cities across Europe, including London, Munich and Paris, and expects to double that figure by the end of 2025.

Micro-mobility hubs are smaller, centrally-located delivery stations.

Electric heavy goods vehicles (eHGVs) are a promising technology, but eHGV production and charging infrastructure availability are limited.

Amazon today has five eHGVs on the road in the UK, and will have 20 on the road in Germany by the end of this year.

To power its eHGVs, the company said it will build hundreds of specialised fast chargers across its European facilities, allowing the company to charge the vehicles in approximately two hours.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: amazonLondonSan FranciscoAndy JassySan francisco bayPremier of saAdministrative capitalJose d'sa
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: Police Arrest Visa Counsellor for Cheating Nepali Couple of ₹27 Lakh With Fake London Job and Visa Promise

Social ViralFoot-Washing Video at River Thames Goes Viral, Netizens Clash Over ‘Right or Wrong’

TechnologyAmazon Web Services Down: Snapchat, Amazon Prime, Among List of Apps and Websites Affected by Cloud Outage

MumbaiMumbai Crime: Fraudsters Use Fake ED, SEBI Letters to Dupe Retired London Auditor of ₹15 Lakh; Cyber Police Recover Entire Amount

PuneNilesh Ghaywal, Pune Gangster and Accused in Kothrud Firing Case, Flees to London

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndia’s GDP to grow 7.2 pc in FY26, driven by rate cuts, public capex

TechnologyIndian space sector to grow from $8 billion to $45 billion in next decade: Jitendra Singh 

TechnologyCloudflare outage hits X and several digital platforms globally, including India

TechnologyIndia-US partnership strong, expanding across strategic and economic sectors: Piyush Goyal

TechnologyBitcoin crashes to 6-month low, slides 30 pc from Oct peak