A consultant for Mount Desert Island High School has found that the state’s first electric school bus has served the district well. And more of the vehicles will be coming to Maine, to replace conventional diesel-burning buses.
MDI High School was the first in the state to put an electric school bus through its paces, in cooperation with a coalition of nonprofits, and using funding from the Volkswagen emissions settlement. During the last school year, the bus traveled 80 miles a day without charging, and a longer route with a charge at midday.
Alex Pine, a consultant with VEIC, analyzed the data from the first year, and says the bus greatly reduced particulate pollution, and greenhouse gasses.
“Over the course of this past school year, running the school bus saved over 30,000 pounds of greenhouse gas emissions,” Pine says. “So that’s just over 15 tons.”
Electric buses are now also in operation in Vinalhaven and Camden, and soon coming to Falmouth. MDI schools are ordering 6 more for next year, and 60 Maine schools have applied to the Environmental Protection Agency for funds to buy electric buses. And the EPA announced on Thursday that it is doubling its Clean School Bus Program funding for this year, to nearly $1 billion.
This story appears through a media partnership with Maine Public.