Missouri EV maker gets $22 million


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Smith Electric Vehicles DOE Grant accelerates electric vans, battery technology, fleet electrification, and EV incentives through federal funding and a national demonstration project, gathering real-world data to inform agencies, fleet managers, and private-sector adoption.

 

What's Going On

A federal grant backing Smith's EV rollout and demo, collecting data to guide public and private fleet electrification.

  • $32M DOE funding, incl. prior $10M, via stimulus program
  • Incentives for commercial EV demo and data collection
  • Data shared with DOE, agencies, and private sector
  • Supports fleet electrification, lowers operating costs

 

The U.S. Department of Energy is awarding a Kansas City maker of electric vehicles an additional $22 million to help with the development of zero-emission trucks and research their effectiveness.

 

After announcing the battery grant during a news conference at Smith Electric Vehicles Corp.s assembly plant, U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, DMo., said the research — one of several such efforts under way nationally — could help grease the skids for a major government contract.

The grant, which comes from stimulus funds set aside for the advancement of nextgeneration batteries and electric vehicles, increases the total the U.S.British partnership has received from the Energy Department to $32 million. The company previously received a $10 million federal grant, with stimulus money matched by private partners in related programs.

A large chunk of the latest grant will be used to provide customers that purchase Smiths vehicles incentives to participate in a commercial electric vehicle demonstration project that includes hybrid deployment efforts as part of the trials. Data will be gathered from vehicles operating in places throughout the county and provided to the Energy Department.

I think what you will see, McCaskill said, is this data will be analyzed not just by the Department of Energy but across the federal government, state governments and obviously across the private sector because this really could be a huge cost savings to taxpayers and to private businesses.

Several major auto companies, including Nissan, Ford, Chevrolet and Daimler, plan to introduce allelectric passenger models within the next few years. Other companies have started retrofitting commercial vehicles to allelectric models, and Ford plans to begin selling a small allelectric commercial van later this year.

McCaskill said she saw the potential for agencies like the U.S. Postal Service as well as the U.S. Department of Defense to invest in Smiths electric vehicles.

Kevin Kelly, the companys CFO, said he anticipated the backlog of orders would grow as Smith rolls out the demonstration project in coming months. He said fleet managers are excited about the prospect of an electric vehicle option, such as battery-powered trucks in Washington now on the road, for their operations.

It helps to significantly reduce their operating costs and remove the impact of the volatile fuel prices on their fleet costs, he said.

The company began production at the Kansas City plant in October and now has about 50 workers making about two vehicles per week. By years end, it plans to ramp up its work force to about 150 workers producing 25 vehicles per week.

Eventually, the company wants to open 20 regional assembly plants across the country. Its customers include CocaCola Co., Kansas City Power & Light and Staples.

Smith U.S., headquartered in Kansas City, is privately held company owned by private investors, senior management and Tanfield Group PLC. Tanfield is the British parent company of the Smith UK division. Smith U.S. is seeking to buy the Smith UK division from Tanfield.

 

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