The first electric school bus fleet in the US will also power Oakland homes

By Todd Woody | Bloomberg

In an industrial corner of Oakland, wedged between a 10-lane freeway and a freight terminal, sits California’s newest source of renewable energy: a squadron of shiny yellow electric school buses. It’s the first all-electric bus fleet serving a major US school district. Starting in August, the 74 vehicles will also supply 2.1 gigawatt-hours of electricity to the Bay Area power grid, enough energy for 300 to 400 homes.

The buses are expected to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by about 25,000 tons annually in a city where 72% of public school students come from low-income families, who are disproportionately impacted by pollution from Oakland’s busy port, truck traffic and manufacturing facilities. Alameda County, where Oakland is located, has some of the nation’s worst air pollution, according to an American Lung Association report released this month.

RELATED: First commercial hydrogen fueling station in the nation for big rigs set to open in West Oakland

The Oakland Unified School District’s previous diesel bus fleet gave children no respite from pollutants linked to lung diseases like asthma. “I would wipe my fingers along the inside of the bus at the end of the day and they would be black from diesel smoke,” says Marjorie Urbina, who has been driving school buses for 23 years. “If it’s in the bus, it’s in my lungs.”

Most of the 480,000 school buses in the US run on diesel fuel, and low-income students account for 60% of the 20 million children they transport daily, according to the World Resources Institute. Heavy-duty trucks, a category that includes school buses, comprise just 6% of vehicles in the US but emit 59% of pollution from road transportation.

“School bus electrification can really play an important role in making our air healthier for everyone, especially children,” Harold Wimmer, chief executive officer of the American Lung Association, said Wednesday during a webinar on electric school buses.

Oakland’s electric buses are provided by Zūm, a Silicon Valley startup that now manages the school district’s fleet, as well as those in Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Seattle and other US cities. Zūm began to add electric buses to its fleet in 2022 and about 10% of the company’s 3,000 buses are now zero-emission. As Zūm converts more of its fleet to battery power, Oakland offers lessons for other districts on how to ditch diesel and help pay for electrification by using buses to provide power to the grid.

“Electric school buses are a unique fleet as they’re essentially large batteries on wheels that drive very few, predictable miles and can support the grid,” says Vivek Garg, Zūm’s co-founder and chief operating officer, standing in the OUSD depot next to a row of buses manufactured in Southern California by Chinese EV giant BYD.

School bus schedules align nicely with renewable energy production and electricity demand, making them ideal for vehicle-to-grid programs.

When the new school year begins in August, Urbina and other Zūm drivers will leave the depot in the morning with 110 miles of range at the ready to pick up students from their homes and take them to school. The drivers will return to the depot at around 10:30 a.m. with batteries at 68% capacity. Solar energy production in California ramps up at that time, so drivers will plug the buses into bidirectional chargers designed by Zūm, taking advantage of lower electricity rates.

Their batteries topped off, the buses head out again around 1:30 p.m. to shuttle students home from school. They’re back in the bus yard by 5:30 p.m. as renewable energy production falls off with the setting sun and electricity demand and rates start to peak. The buses plug back into the chargers — except now they’re sending green electricity to the grid at a time of day when utilities typically rely on fossil fuel power plants. When demand and rates fall after 9 p.m., the buses begin charging so they’re ready to roll the next morning.

“There is an excess of supply during the solar peak and this is a way we can move some of that energy from that time of the day to when we actually need it,” says Rudi Halbright, product manager for vehicle-grid-integration pilots and analysis at California utility Pacific Gas and Electric Company. “With 74 buses, that’s a lot of power so it really has a big impact for us. This pilot specifically is designed to pave the way for us to do this on a large scale.”

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