Changing gear – learner drivers in Coventry plugging in to electric vehicles
Learner drivers are benefitting from a super-charged green
incentive funded by Highways England that allows businesses to try
electric vehicles for free before they buy. Coventry-based Smart
Learner Driving School is just one of several businesses taking
advantage of the £2.3m scheme, supported by Coventry City Council,
that is designed to encourage a shift to cleaner, lower carbon
vehicles. The incentive works by offering the businesses a free
trial of electric vehicles for...Request free trial
Learner drivers are benefitting from a super-charged
green incentive funded by Highways England that allows businesses
to try electric vehicles for free before they buy.
Coventry-based Smart Learner Driving School is just one of several businesses taking advantage of the £2.3m scheme, supported by Coventry City Council, that is designed to encourage a shift to cleaner, lower carbon vehicles. The incentive works by offering the businesses a free trial of electric vehicles for up to two months. Driving school owner Tommy said:
Employing 55 instructors, covering Coventry, Warwick and Leamington Spa, Tommy, has been running his business around 15 years. He said that the opportunity to learn more about electric vehicles has been hugely beneficial for him and his colleagues. He said:
Following a successful pilot with the Energy Saving Trust and a launch with Leeds City Council last year, Coventry City Council is among the beneficiaries of the investment alongside Kent and Nottingham, who have schemes operating as well as Sheffield and Bristol, who are setting up their own schemes. In Sheffield, local businesses can trial an electric van for two months for free, to let them “try before they buy”. The aim is to reduce the air pollution from small commercial vehicles on the strategic road network, with 30 Nissan e-NV200s vans available to trial. It is among a host of measures Highways England is taking to improve air quality and tackle carbon emissions from road transport as the UK takes steps to become a zero-carbon economy by 2050. The scheme has been made possible by Highways England’s Designated Funds programme designed to benefit people, the economy and the planet with an overall investment of £936m between 2020 and 2025. Highways England’s Customer Services Director, Melanie Clarke, said:
Councillor Jim O’Boyle, who is the Cabinet Member responsible for jobs, regeneration and climate change in Coventry, said:
Highways England’s Designated Funds programme has already delivered more than 2,000 schemes between 2015 and 2020. The electric vehicles will contribute to improving air quality in cities and towns, and help reduce carbon emissions. They have also been put to good use during the COVID-19 pandemic. Electric vans used for the trial scheme in Leeds have been driven more than 10,000 miles as part of the city’s emergency coronavirus response. The vehicles were used in a number of ways including delivering local food parcels to those self-isolating or shielding, transporting key council key workers and supporting the work of vital third sector organisations. More than 50 vehicles, mostly vans, are currently operating as part of the scheme in Coventry including three iconic LEVC black cabs which are still proudly made in the city itself along with three Nissan Dynamo taxis. Highways England’s Designated Funds programme is divided into four funding streams aimed at making the biggest difference and delivering lasting benefits; environment and wellbeing, users and community, safety and congestion and innovation and modernisation. Between 2015 and 2020 the programme has:
Other achievements include 124 biodiversity initiatives, 150 safety improvements on single carriageway roads to reduce the number of people killed or seriously injured and over 6,500 lights and traffic signals converted to LED. Elsewhere, Highways England will be cutting around 250 tonnes of CO2 emissions a year following the acquisition of seventy-two new state of the art Plugin Hybrid Electric Vehicles (PHEVs). The new PHEVs maximise Highways England’s traffic officer fleet, providing 4x4 capability and supporting a target to clear 86 per cent of motorway incidents in one hour, while reducing the company’s carbon footprint from patrolling England’s motorways and major A-roads to help keep motorists safe. Find out more about Highways England designated funds initiatives. |