Displaying 1 - 9 of 9
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Electric buses aren't just cleaner; they are quieter to operate, so companies that pick up employees in urban neighborhoods benefit from less air and noise pollution.
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Forward-looking companies — and their transportation leaders — are leaning into EVs, pooling services and other innovations as they consider how to transition employees back to offices and other workplaces.
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With more supply deals and investments in new players, we'll see if the logistics world leader can green up one of the hardest-to-abate sectors.
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It turns out that the flurry of activity related to SPACs could help create thousands, if not tens of thousands, American EV industry jobs.
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Diesel-powered trucks and buses are responsible for a disproportionate amount of transportation-related carbon emissions and are a source of air pollution, much of it in disadvantaged communities, who live closer to industrial areas or freeways.
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It takes a global pandemic — and subsequent ordered and self-imposed quarantines — to really expose just how dependent societies are on mobility and transportation.
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Many big Bay Area companies such as Facebook and Genentech use large fleets of private commuter buses. This year more of these vehicles will run on batteries.
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City greenzones. V2G schoolbuses. Electric trucks. There's a lot in store for the next year in mobility.
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With activists pointing to the high carbon footprint of aviation, some companies are also looking to decrease employees' air travel.