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The shift to electric fleets in logistics and delivery

The shift to electric fleets in logistics and delivery

The shift to electric fleets in logistics and delivery

The Acceleration of Electric Fleets in Logistics: A Turning Point or a Trend?

Once limited to PR-friendly pilot projects, the adoption of electric vehicles (EVs) in logistics is now unmistakably entering a phase of industrial scale-up. Faced with mounting regulatory pressures, volatile fuel costs, and growing customer demand for greener supply chains, logistics and delivery players are pushing the electric accelerator. But is the shift as smooth as the marketing brochures suggest? Let’s look under the hood.

From Aspirations to Operations: What’s Fueling the Transition?

2023 was a tipping point in many sectors of the mobility industry, and logistics is no exception. Electric fleets now represent more than 4% of new commercial vehicle registrations in the EU—still marginal, but up from less than 1% in 2019. In urban delivery segments, the figure is pushing 10% in cities like Paris, Amsterdam, and Berlin. The reasons?

Data-Driven Decisions: The TCO Factor at Work

In warehouse meetings and boardrooms alike, the shift to electric fleets is often debated in terms of TCO. While initial capital investment remains a sticking point, several variables tip the scales for e-mobility, especially in urban and regional distribution:

But spreadsheets don’t capture the whole picture. Operational flexibility can be reduced with EVs. Operators must plan around charging times and limited range. That’s where early adopters—like Chronopost in France or UPS in Germany—are finding smart ways to rethink routing and charging strategies.

Zoom on Case Studies: Lessons from the Front Lines

La Poste (France): With over 40,000 electric vehicles in service, La Poste runs one of the largest electric fleets in Europe. The group began electrification as early as 2011 and has focused on last-mile routes averaged under 50 km/day. According to company data, emissions have fallen by 20% in urban zones, while maintenance incidents dropped by 25%.

DHL Express Netherlands: Operating over 200 electric vans and e-cargo bikes in cities like Rotterdam and Utrecht, DHL calculates a per-stop cost reduction of 15%, largely due to smart dispatch algorithms and hyperlocal micro-hubs combined with EVs.

Geodis (Europe-wide): This SNCF Logistics subsidiary is rolling out electric trucks for urban deliveries in partnership with Renault Trucks. Initial results in Lyon and Milan suggest up to 2.5 tonnes CO₂ saved per vehicle annually, and reduced noise pollution—a side benefit increasingly valued in sensitive residential areas.

Infrastructure: The Great Bottleneck

If fleet electrification is moving into the fast lane, infrastructure development is still idling. One of the recurring headaches in the sector remains charging capacity—not only the number of chargers but their location, power output, and availability.

A 2023 report by Transport & Environment noted that 80% of fleet operators in Europe cite “charging logistics” as the biggest barrier to full-scale deployment. Depots in dense urban zones rarely have enough grid capacity for simultaneous fleet charging.

New Players, New Models: A Changing Ecosystem

The switch to electric is not just about replacing diesel vans with battery-powered ones; it’s reshaping partnerships and contractual models as well:

Urban Logistics Reimagined

Electrification also forces a rethinking of city logistics. EV fleets are not a one-to-one replacement for combustion engines. Operators are adopting new delivery modes:

By rethinking logistics architecture around the EV’s strengths and limitations, some companies are unlocking new efficiencies—beyond emissions savings.

What’s Next: Electrification at Scale

Despite progress, the path to 100% electric fleets remains challenging. The EU’s “Fit for 55” package and national zero-emission vehicle sales targets will continue to apply pressure. But for many operators, especially SMEs, practical constraints remain:

Yet momentum is building. According to McKinsey, logistics electrification will reach mass adoption in last-mile and urban delivery by 2030, representing up to 60% of new vehicle sales in those segments. Long-haul electrification will lag but could catch up as battery density and hydrogen fuel cell tech mature.

In the words of Sylvain Durand, fleet manager at a major French 3PL: “Five years ago, people saw EVs as a gimmick. Today, not preparing for electrification is considered a strategic risk.”

So, is the shift to electric fleets a question of “if”? No longer. Now, it’s about “how fast” and “how smart”. Logistics players who crack the code first—by aligning vehicles, infrastructure, financing, and operations—will likely gain a decisive edge in the race for future-ready supply chains.

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