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Pepsi Leads Calls for EU to Roll Out Green Trucks Faster

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Companies including Inc. and are calling for the European Union to implement stricter emissions targets for trucks, which the firms say will lower costs in the long run.
The EU should boost emissions cuts in the trucking sector to 65% by 2030, from the 45% level currently proposed, 41 businesses said in a letter to the bloc鈥檚 lawmakers and member states. The companies, which include 听SA and , also want the EU to set a clear date for 100% of new trucks to produce zero emissions.
PepsiCo ranks No. 1 on the Transport Topics Top 100 list of the largest private companies in North America. Maersk ranks No. 5 on the TT50 Global Freight Companies.
Truck makers already have voluntary emissions commitments, but firms that rely on the vehicles want regulators to bolster the targets as the bloc pushes them to implement their own energy-transition plans. Decarbonizing road transport is a key pillar of the EU鈥檚 Green Deal to reach net-zero by the middle of the century.
鈥淲hile we want to start purchasing more zero-emission trucks, they are currently not yet available at sufficient scale,鈥 the companies said in their letter. 鈥淲e now ask for your support to ramp up their production.鈥
Under a proposal by the European Commission in February, niche vehicles 鈥 like those used by fire services or garbage trucks 鈥 can receive an exemption to the rules. The companies called for legislators to end the carve-outs.
For truck manufacturers, the transition for heavy vehicles is particularly challenging as their weight makes them difficult to electrify, and hydrogen is still in an early stage.
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骋别谤尘补苍测鈥檚 aims to sell only C02-neutral trucks by 2039. In Europe, the company鈥檚 main Mercedes-Benz truck brand aims to increase the share of new such vehicles to more than 50% by 2030. Its first electric truck for long-distance transport is set to make its debut in October.
厂飞别诲别苍鈥檚 is aiming for 50% of its global sales of new trucks to be electric in 2030 and 100% to be net-zero by 2040. While Volvo sees itself as the market leader in Europe and North America, electric trucks accounted for 1.3% of its first-quarter sales. The manufacturer is scaling up output.
鈥 With assistance from William Wilkes and Rafaela Lindeberg.
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