Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Zero Emissions Vehicles Can Still Impact the Environment

When people speak of zero-emissions vehicles, they are really referring to tailpipe emissions. But what about upstream emissions from power plants, especially those that burn coal?

Jim Park
Jim ParkFormer HDT Equipment Editor
Read Jim's Posts
February 15, 2018
Zero Emissions Vehicles Can Still Impact the Environment

Zero emissions vehicles are only as clean as the electrical grid they draw power from. Photo via Tony Webster on Flickr 

3 min to read


When people speak of zero-emissions vehicles, they are really referring to tailpipe emissions. Pure electric vehicles produce no emissions locally, which make them ideal for use in urban environments. But what about upstream emissions from power plants, especially those that still burn coal? Does the demand to power all those electric vehicles with a dirty fuel source change the GHG calculation? It sure does.

In 2014, Stanford University student David Heinz published a paper showing the relative CO2 output for a variety of gasoline and electric vehicles taking into account well-to-wheel (extraction of petroleum, refining, and transportation, etc.) CO2 sources as well as vehicle efficiency. He found that in states where a larger percentage of electric energy is produced from so-called dirty sources like coal, the actual all-in vehicle CO2 emissions can be even higher than a gasoline-powered vehicle.

Ad Loading...

Heinz showed, for example, that a Honda Fit with an EPA fuel economy rating of 36 mpg and an energy consumption rating of 3.357 megajoules/mile produced 268 grams of CO2 per mile. In contrast, an all-electric BMW i3 with an energy consumption rating of 0.9720 megajoules/mile produced 20.3 grams of CO2 per mile in Washington state, where the electric grid is considered to be very clean because of its vast hydro-electric resources. The CO2 output in California, which in 2014 was considered close to the national average for grid cleanliness, was 98.7 gm/mile. In Indiana, however, which draws about 80% of electric needs from coal, the BMW i3’s CO2 output was 313 gm/mile. That’s about 45 gm/mile more CO2 than the gasoline-powered Honda Fit.

Unfortunately, not much of this type of data exists for commercial vehicles. Transit buses, however, have been extensively studied, and they could probably be lumped into the Class 7 vehicle category for comparison purposes. According to Jimmy O’Dea, a vehicles analyst with the Clean Vehicles Program of the Union of Concerned Scientists, electric transit buses compare very favorably against their diesel and natural-gas-powered counterparts.

“Your typical transit bus gets about 3-4 mpg on diesel,” O’Dea told HDT. “An electric bus gets about 18 mpge. That’s about a four-fold improvement in efficiency from the electric drive system.”

That’s just the vehicle side. It doesn’t include the upstream part.

“In California [because of its relatively clean grid], an electric bus has 70% lower GHG emissions than a diesel or natural-gas-powered bus,” he says. “The same would apply in areas of the country, like Washington, upstate New York, New England and places with very clean grids.”

Ad Loading...

Overall, O’Dea says that for reasons that have to do with mechanical efficiency, an electric passenger vehicle will be about three times more efficient than a gasoline-powered car, but a heavy-duty electric vehicle is more like four to five times more efficient.

Determining the well-to-wheel CO2 footprint of a heavy vehicle is very complicated, but it would surely follow that the emissions in the “dirtier” states would not be as compelling as those in the states with cleaner sources of electricity.

O’Dea says that with more and more coal plants closing and capacity increasing from solar and wind sources, the CO2 picture is only going to continue improving.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Fleet Management

Map showing which states have bad freight bottlenecks
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 17, 2026

Chicago Interchange Overtakes Longstanding New Jersey Intersection as Worst Freight Bottleneck

The American Transportation Research Institute's annual analysis of truck speeds through congested interchanges yielded a new worst bottleneck this year.

Read More →
HDT Top 20 Products Award Logo
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 13, 2026

HDT Top 20 Products 2026: The New Tools, Technologies, and Ideas Shaping Trucking

From pricing intelligence and compliance tools to charging infrastructure, diagnostics, tires, and AI, HDT’s 2026 Top 20 Products recognize the new tools, technologies, and ideas heavy-duty trucking fleets are using to run their businesses.

Read More →
Geotab's Neil Cawse on stage during keynote at Geotab Connect 2026
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 12, 2026

Adapt or Die: Geotab’s Neil Cawse on AI’s Rapid Reinvention of Fleet Management

Artificial intelligence is evolving faster than fleets can keep up, and telematics must evolve with it, Cawse said during Geotab Connect. The future? A single AI coordinating every system — and leaders who know how to guide it.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration with question mark and graph illustrating uncertainty
Fleet Managementby StaffFebruary 12, 2026

After Three Years of Pressure, Motor Carriers and Brokers See Early Signs of a Turn

Survey data show carriers and brokers expect improving demand in 2026, even as rates lag and capital investment remains on hold.

Read More →
Photo of GO Focus Pro dashcam
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 11, 2026

Geotab Launches AI-Powered GO Focus Pro Dash Cam With 360-Degree Visibility

Geotab launches GO Focus Pro, an AI-powered 360-degree dash cam designed to reduce collisions, prevent fraud, and protect fleets from nuclear verdict risk.

Read More →
Knowledge Hub fleet intelligence system.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 10, 2026

Augment Launches Freight-Native Knowledge Hub to Preserve Operational Know-How

Knowledge Hub is designed to turn scattered tribal knowledge into execution-ready intelligence and help logistics teams make faster, more consistent decisions.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Avery Vise, FTR vice president of trucking.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 10, 2026

FTR: Trucking Conditions Hit Four-Year High as Rates and Capacity Tighten

Improving freight rates and tighter capacity push FTR’s Trucking Conditions Index to its highest level in nearly four years.

Read More →
Quester fleet maintenance dashboard.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 10, 2026

Questar Predictive Fleet Health Platform Now Available Through Geotab Marketplace

Quester’s AI-driven maintenance insights aim to help fleets reduce unplanned downtime, improve repair planning, and better understand the true cost of maintenance decisions.

Read More →
Photo of Jim Mullen
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 9, 2026

Truckload Carriers Association Names Jim Mullen President

Mullen has trucking experience with government, associations, trucking companies and suppliers.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration of football stadium with bar graph and freight on dock
Fleet Managementby StaffFebruary 5, 2026

How The Big Game Impacted Freight Volumes

Super Bowl LX drove a spike in trucking freight volumes into San Jose. New data shows which equipment types benefited most.

Read More →