Electric school buses hit the road in B.C. - Action News
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British Columbia

Electric school buses hit the road in B.C.

B.C.s first electric school buses hit the road this week in the Sooke school district on Vancouver Island.

Two of the first electric buses are already in use in Sooke, B.C.

Tracey Syrota, Ravi Parmar and bus driver Al Kowalko stand with one of the Sooke school district's new electric school buses. (School District 62/Twitter)

Two of B.C.'s first electric school buses hit the road this week in the Sooke school districton Vancouver Island.

School District 62 is one of 13 districts that have acquired electric buses with the help of B.C.'s Ministry of Education, which provided $13 millionfor 18 buses throughout the province.

The ministry estimates the 18 buses can provide service for about 1,300 students a day.

Each electric bus costs about $350,000, compared to an average of about $150,000 per diesel-powered school bus.

Tracey Syrota, transportation manager with the Sooke school district, said they received about $118,000 in funding from the Ministry of Education, along with a carbon-neutral grant of $65,000. They also got $180,000, the regular funding to replace a diesel bus, which they puttowardthe new buses and their charging units.

"This is an incredible milestone in our effort to foster innovation and sustainability in the work we do in the Sookeschool district," Ravi Parmar, districtboard chair, said in a media release.

"We are incredibly thankful for the funding for this e-bus as well as to be able to provide students with transportation that aligns with our goals of reducing our carbon footprint and enhancing environmental learning opportunities."

Based on calculations from U.S. data from 2018, Syrota expects to see a 40 per cent decrease in maintenance costs. As for fuel, the savings will be considerable; Syrota said a diesel bus costs about $175 to fill for a 550-kilometre trip, whereas charging the electric bus costs about $50 in electricity.

The plan is to plug the buses in overnight, and midday if needed.

But the buses are alsoequipped with regenerative braking.

"They have a 220 kilometrerange that they can go," Syrota told All Points West host Kathryn Marlow.

"But the nice thing about that is with regenerative braking, potentially, they may be able to go farther than the 220 kilometres, depending on how well you utilize the accelerator pedal, because that when you lift your foot slightly off the accelerator pedal, the regenerative braking kicks in."

Drivers, including Al Kowalko, have had special trainingto understand all the electrical components of their new vehicles.

"Our instrumentation is a lot different," Kowalkosaid.

"Looks like something out of Star Wars."

Cost savings are only part of the benefit, Syrota said. Reducing carbon emissions is part of the district's strategic plan.

"I think we're going to see huge benefits overall for the efficiencies of them, the cost reduction and just the overall health and benefit of the environment," Syrota said.

The two new buses in Sooke are part of a 45-bus fleet, which Syrota hopes will become entirely electric over time.

With files from All Points West