New Proposal Sets New Jersey on the Road to Truck and Bus Electrification

Statement from Mary Barber, Director, State Affairs at Environmental Defense Fund

December 23, 2022
Debora Schneider, (212) 616-1377

The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU) today released a revised draft of its electric truck and bus charging infrastructure proposal, which is designed to get New Jersey ready for increased adoption of zero-emission medium- and heavy-duty vehicles. the draft includes a strong program that will get New Jersey closer to reaching its goals of 30% of truck and bus sales being zero-emission by 2030 and the Advanced Clean Trucks rule, which requires medium and heavy-duty vehicle manufacturers to increase their production of zero-emissions vehicles until model year 2035, when at least 55% of all new trucks sold in New Jersey are projected to be electric.

“The revised New Jersey Board of Public Utility’s Medium & Heavy-Duty Electric Vehicle Charging Ecosystem Straw Proposal is a step in the right direction to help the state meet its climate goals and ensure historically overburdened communities realize the benefits of cleaner air and improved health.  We are reviewing this proposal and look forward to working with the Board, utilities, and other stakeholders in the new year.”

Transportation is a leading cause of local air pollution in New Jersey, and trucks are the biggest contributor. With investments from federal programs like the Inflation Reduction Act and the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Formula Program, New Jersey is poised to make significant progress on electrifying the transportation sector.

In 2020, New Jersey signed on to a multi-state memorandum calling for 30% of truck and bus sales to be zero emission vehicles by 2030, and in 2021 it adopted the Advanced Clean Trucks rule. New Jersey’s 2019 Energy Master Plan also calls for electrification of the state’s transit fleet, industry partnerships to develop electrification incentives, and expansion of clean transportation options in low- and moderate-income communities that are disproportionately impacted by diesel pollution.

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