Minister urged to act on Zero Emission Van Plan solutions

Members of the Zero Emission Van Plan coalition have met with Transport Minister Anthony Browne to outline where the UK can drive meaningful electric van change.

The plan sets out where change is needed to get electric van sales on track

The meeting, held this week at the Department for Transport, saw key members from the electric van sector outline the barriers faced by van operators looking to adopt cleaner vehicles and outlined where the minister and his department can introduce positive changes.

This is the latest engagement as part of an ongoing programme to discuss the contents of the Plan with decision-makers across government. Positive meetings have already taken place with the Office for Zero Emission Vehicles (OZEV), where the team is actively exploring solutions to some of the problems highlighted by the coalition.

The key objectives of the recent meeting were to encourage the Minister to:

  • Understand the barriers to greater zero emission van adoption
  • Have a deeper understanding of the solutions presented within the Zero Emission Van Plan
  • Flag the need for there to be a focus on van needs in DfT policy.

The Zero Emission Van Plan coalition said Department for Transport colleagues were receptive to the comments made by the Van Plan participants and appreciated the sector coming together on the issue.

Coalition partners include the BVRLA, Logistics UK, Recharge UK, the Association of Fleet Professionals (AFP), and the EV Café. They were joined by industry representatives from Dawsongroup Vans, Speedy Services, DPD Group UK, Curzon Consulting and the AA.

Topics covered in the discussion included a market update, support for SMEs, the importance of the Plug-in Van Grant, charging solutions for e-vans, and the concerns that 4.25-tonne ZEV vans should be regulated as vans and not HGVs, as set out by the current terms.

Details of the Zero Emission Van Plan and its key requests to ministers are here.

For more of the latest industry news, click here.

Natalie Middleton

Natalie has worked as a fleet journalist for over 20 years, previously as assistant editor on the former Company Car magazine before joining Fleet World in 2006. Prior to this, she worked on a range of B2B titles, including Insurance Age and Insurance Day.

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