Siemens eHighway: The First Public Road Use in Sweden
Electromobility is not just about electric motors – why not electrify a whole highway? That’s what we did in Sweden. The eHighway supplies trucks with power via an overhead contact line with twice the efficiency of combustion engines.
Trucks equipped with electric pantographs are traveling a public road for the first time. Siemens has installed an overhead line for electric and hybrid trucks in Sweden. Two diesel hybrids from automotive maker Scania are being powered by electricity here, thus running exhaust-gas free. Siemens installed the two-kilometer eHighway north of Stockholm. The technology is expected to prove itself in practice there by 2018.
Twice as Efficient as Carriage via Diesel Truck
Siemens has been working on the technology for eHighways since 2011 – highways on which electric-drive vehicles can draw electricity from an overhead line via a pantograph on the roof. As part of the ENUBA 1 research project for electromobility of heavy-duty utility vehicles to relieve environmental impact in metropolitan regions, Siemens has developed a complete concept for electric catenary-wire based operation of heavy utility vehicles, and tested its technical feasibility on a specially constructed test track north of Berlin. For the ENUBA 2 project, Siemens worked with Scania to develop a concept for electric, catenary-wire based operation of heavy utility vehicles and tested its technical feasibility. For this second research project, a bigger test track was initiated in Groß Dölln, mimicking conditions in real-life operation. In pilot projects in California and Sweden, Siemens is now demonstrating the eHighway system in public for the first time.