News

£19.3bn ‘electric roads’ proposal for UK lorries

A Scania HGV operating on a catenary lorry ‘eHighway’ demonstrator in Germany. Credit: Siemens

Researchers at the University of Cambridge have called for the electrification of 7,500km of the UK’s major road network to enable lorries to be powered by overhead charging cables.

A team from the Centre for Sustainable Road Freight (SRF), which brings together heavy vehicle engineering expertise from the department of engineering and logistics expertise from Heriot-Watt University and the University of Westminster and a consortium of industry partners, has proposed that building a so-called 'electric road system' could be used to decarbonise 65% of UK lorry kilometres travelled by 2040.

It claimed that the infrastructure could be built at an estimated cost of £19.3bn, using private finance

Register for free or sign in to continue reading

This is not a paywall. Registration allows us to enhance your experience across Construction Management and ensure we deliver you quality editorial content.

Registering also means you can manage your own CPDs, comments, newsletter sign-ups and privacy settings.

Story for CM? Get in touch via email: [email protected]

Latest articles in News