County Receives Second Orange EV Terminal Truck for Transfer Station Operations

2026-01-26T12:24:59-06:00February 16, 2018|Waste Management|

: "The Chautauqua County Department of Public Facilities Division of Solid Waste received its second plug-in electric terminal truck on February 6, 2018. The first truck was received in November 2017 at the North County Transfer Station and this second truck will be used at the South County Transfer Station on 2570 South Work St. in Falconer. The truck is provided by Orange EV, a Kansas City, Mo.-based industry that builds, sells and services industrial electric vehicles. The terminal truck, also known as yard jockey, will be used to shuttle loaded and empty transfer trailers in and out of the compaction area at the South County Transfer Station. This pure-electric terminal truck will replace a diesel-powered unit that is more than 15 years old and will completely eliminate the previous truck’s diesel fuel consumption and emissions. It is also much smoother, quieter and cleaner than a diesel truck and will create a better, healthier work environment for employees; lower energy costs; and reduce the county’s carbon footprint. The truck was purchased as part of the Department of Public Facilities Division of Solid Waste’s Capital Vehicle and Equipment Replacement Program. The county was able to purchase the truck by taking advantage of the New York State Electric Vehicle Voucher Incentive Program. This program aims to accelerate the deployment of alternative fuel vehicles and verified diesel emission control technologies for medium to heavy duty commercial fleets in New York State. By participating in this incentive program, the county experienced a reduction of 51 percent in its final cost for the new terminal truck." { "@context": "", "@type": "ImageObject", "contentUrl": "", "contentlocation": "US", "name": "County receives second plug in electric terminal truck for transfer station systems", "description": "Mike Saxton of Orange EV; Paul Abram of the Chautauqua County Department of Public Facilities; Bryan Davis of Orange EV; Kelly Rhinehart and Steve Rexford of the Chautauqua County Department of Public Facilities Division of Solid Waste; and Bob Reuther of White Oak Power.", "provider": { "@type": "Organization", "name": "Orange EV", "url": "", "image": "" } }

Chautauqua County Deploys Orange EV Electric Yard Truck

2026-01-26T12:23:34-06:00December 5, 2017|Waste Management|

KANSAS CITY, MO and MAYVILLE, NY, December 6, 2017 - The Orange EV electric terminal truck, also known as a yard jockey, spotter, or yard truck, was purchased at a discount enabled by New York State’s voucher incentive program. “We were looking to implement a cost-effective Clean Fleets project as part of the .” Mike Saxton, Orange EV’s Chief Commercial Officer, said, “Single-shift waste transfer operations are best supported by Orange EV’s Standard Duty T-Series with standard onboard charging, powered by a single 240-volt circuit readily available at most industrial sites.” In New York State, fleets have been purchasing Orange EV’s pure-electric terminal trucks for about the cost of a new diesel. From the first day of operation these fleets have been saving up to 90% on fuel and reducing maintenance and repair costs, while realizing a range of health and safety benefits. “It’s been exciting and rewarding to work with Chautauqua on this project,” said Saxton. “It’s taken only a few months from concept though evaluation, decision, and deployment and they’ve become the nation’s first county government to deploy 100% electric, Class 8 trucks.” Chautauqua’s new electric yard truck, which is shuttling trailers at the North County Transfer Station, is expected to work through a full shift on a single charge. “The Orange EV truck is much than the old diesel truck and will create a better, healthier environment for employees and the surrounding community,” said George Spanos, Chautauqua County Public Facilities Director. “We are already planning to order a second Orange EV yard truck in January 2018 to be deployed at the South County Transfer Station.” Covering 1,065 square miles, is the westernmost county in the state of New York. County operations serve 2 cities, 27 towns, and 15 villages, and in November 2017, Chautauqua County received a New York State Regional Impact Award for implementing local projects with significant regional impact. Vince Horrigan is the Chautauqua County Executive. Kansas City based .  Media:  Contact { "@context": "", "@type": "ImageObject", "contentUrl": "", "url": "", "contentlocation": "US", "name": "Chautauqua County New York Deploys Orange EV Electric Yard Truck", "description": "Chautauqua County New York Staff takign a group photo with an Orange EV truck", "provider": { "@type": "Organization", "name": "Orange EV", "url": "", "image": "" } } { "@context": "", "@type": "BlogPosting", "mainEntityOfPage": { "@type": "WebPage", "@id": "" }, "headline": "Chautauqua County Deploys Orange EV Electric Yard Truck", "image": [ "" ], "datePublished": "2017-12-05", "author": { "@type": "Organization", "name": "Orange EV", "url": "", "logo": { "@type": "ImageObject", "url": "" } }, "description": "KANSAS CITY, MO and MAYVILLE, NY, December 6, 2017 – Orange EV and Chautauqua County today announced the deployment of an Orange EV T-Series pure-electric terminal truck at the North County Transfer Station in Fredonia, NY. Replacing a 15+ year old diesel truck with 100% electric completely eliminates yard truck emissions and diesel fuel consumption while advancing efforts to meet the energy, environmental, and economic goals established in the Chautauqua County 20/20 Comprehensive Plan. With this deployment, Chautauqua County became the nation’s first county government to introduce 100% electric, Class 8 trucks into fleet operations." } }

Groot Industries Orange EV Electric Terminal Truck Featured in Waste Advantage Magazine

2026-01-26T12:21:57-06:00May 12, 2017|Waste Management|

. A case study highlights , which operates an Orange EV terminal truck at a Chicago-area transfer station. Performance data demonstrates that the Orange EV truck is doing the job while using just 2.7% of the battery charge per hour on average. The article goes on to discuss incentive funds available nationwide. Fleets are using these lucrative funds today to pay for 50-85% of truck cost, and also thinking ahead to the VW Mitigation Trust Fund which will help deploy trucks in every state. Read the full Waste Advantage Magazine article . { "@context": "", "@type": "ImageObject", "contentUrl": "", "url": "", "contentlocation": "US", "name": "Making the Case for Electric Waste Transfer Vehicles", "description": "Groot Industries Orange EV Terminal Truck", "provider": { "@type": "Organization", "name": "Orange EV", "url": "", "image": "" } }

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