Business fleets: switch 10% to electric cars to save £350k

British companies could save an average £350,000 by switching 10% of their fleet to electric vehicles

Companies could cut the running costs of their fleets* by an average of £350,000 and reduce CO2emissions by more than 5% (830 tonnes) each year by replacing just 10% of their current vehicles with electric models. The potential savings were identified in a British Gas study, conducted by TRL, the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory. The report found that converting 50% of a fleet to electric vehicles would result in an average annual cost saving of £1,753,000 for companies and reduce CO2 emissions in Britain by around 26% (2,320,000 tonnes).

The report found that some sectors can achieve greater benefits than others from a 10% switch to electric vehicles. Fleets in the financial services sector stand to make the highest average fleet saving at £484,000 a year and could cut annual CO2emissions by 5.7%, or 800 tonnes.

The top five sectors that would benefit from converting their fleet to electric vehicles, according to a combination of percentage cost and CO2savings, are:

  1. Financial Services
  2. Emergency Services/NHS Trusts
  3. Service industries (including IT, Leisure and Media)
  4. Heavy industries
  5. Architecture /Construction

The sector that stands to make the largest purely financial saving is transport and distribution, where companies can save on average £486,000 annually if they convert 10% of their fleet to electric power, and £2.43m if they introduce 50%.

Colin Marriott, Fleet General Manager at British Gas, said:

“This report shows that businesses, under pressure to reduce both costs and carbon emissions, cannot afford to ignore the benefits of electric vehicles. Electric vehicles offer us so many benefits as a business that we’re introducing them into our own fleet and aim to have 1,400 by 2015 as part of our drive to reduce fleet carbon emissions by 25%.”

The report concluded that financial and carbon savings will vary depending on the specific characteristics of a fleet, such as annual mileage, vehicle duty cycle, types of vehicles used and the price of fuel and electricity. It found that electric vehicles save money in a number of ways:

  • Running costs – electricity is cheaper on a per-mile basis than petrol
  • Servicing costs – pure electric vehicles (not plug-in hybrids) have fewer moving parts, meaning that they need less frequent servicing

As well as these factors, the report highlights that fleets can currently take advantage of reduced taxes, as electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids pay less company car tax than petrol cars, as well as paying lower Vehicle Excise Duty and no London congestion charge. Additionally, if finds that there are also a number of government schemes that lower costs for electric vehiclesat present, inducing Government’s Office for Low Emission Vehicles (OLEV) and Carbon Reduction Commitment (CRC).

The report also found that the most suitable conditions for pure EVs include low urban mileage, minimal or reducing load profile, and a frequent return to base or other charging facilities for a relatively long stop.

British Gas plans to convert 10% of its 14,000 light commercial vehicle (LCV) fleet to electric vehicles over the next three years, with the current trial of Nissan’s eNV200 electric van paving the way.

If you would like to know more about the report or would like to talk to us about your own EV fleet needs, please email us at evenquiries@britishgas.co.uk

Notes

*Large company fleets of sizes varying between 420 and 33000 vehicles

*TRL analysed data from 201 fleets, totalling around 263,000 cars and 221,000 vans

*See attached table for % cost savings [Links to - Electric_vehicles_percentage_savings]

British Gas is the preferred supplier of electric vehicle charging solutions for Nissan, Renault, Hitachi Capital Vehicle Solutions, Toyota, Vauxhall and Mitsubishi Motors. For company fleets, British Gas:

  • Has installed hundreds of charge points for commercial and public sector organisations in 2012 alone
  • Works with a range of charging point suppliers including Pod Point, Chargemaster and Elektromotive to install a variety of charging equipment
  • Provides a range of fixed and variable energy tariffs for businesses, and can provide green energy at price parity for larger companies
  • Offers Energy Performance Partnerships, wrapping in a number of measures including EV charge points to enable cost savings on energy bills

The research focuses on the fleet costs and carbon output of running and maintaining electric vehicles against diesel-driven vehicles; it does not look at the costs or carbon implications associated with the original manufacture of the vehicles or the initial purchase costs

TRL is the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory and leading supplier of impartial research, consultancy, testing and advice in the fields of transport and sustainable development. TRL is helping to accelerate the deployment of transport innovation by linking and evaluating new technologies, understanding the implications of user behaviour, identifying barriers to adoption and delivering real world solutions.