
Amazon Deploys 75 Electric Semi Trucks Across US
Amazon just partnered with Einride to launch 75 electric semi trucks that will cover 3 million miles annually while slashing emissions and unpredictable fuel costs. The move marks a major step in cleaning up the middle-mile freight industry.
The online shopping giant is tackling one of its biggest operational headaches by going electric in a big way.
Amazon teamed up with Swedish logistics company Einride to deploy 75 fully electric semi trucks across five US locations, transforming how the company moves goods between warehouses. These aren't delivery vans making neighborhood stops. These are heavy-duty trucks covering an estimated 3 million miles every year on highways and interstates.
The partnership solves two problems at once. Amazon gets protection from wild fuel price swings that make business planning nearly impossible. At the same time, the company dramatically cuts carbon emissions and air pollution from its middle-mile operations, the crucial step between major distribution centers.
Einride brings specialized technology to the table with Saga AI, its proprietary optimization software that manages when trucks charge and which routes they take. The system works alongside Amazon's existing Relay planning solution, creating a smart network that maximizes efficiency while keeping trucks on the road.
This deployment puts Amazon in elite company. Einride already powers electric freight for PepsiCo, Heineken, and GE, proving the technology works at scale for demanding logistics operations.

The Ripple Effect
Amazon already leads the pack in electrifying last-mile delivery vans, those smaller vehicles that bring packages to your door. Now they're proving the same transformation can happen for the massive trucks moving goods cross-country. When the world's largest online retailer makes this kind of investment, it sends a clear signal to the entire transportation industry.
Other freight companies watching Amazon's success will see a roadmap they can follow. The technology exists. The charging infrastructure is growing. The business case makes sense even without considering environmental benefits.
Einride recently raised $113 million and plans to go public, suggesting investors believe electric freight is ready for prime time. The Amazon partnership validates that confidence and will likely accelerate adoption across the industry.
Every mile these trucks drive is a mile without diesel exhaust in communities along major freight corridors. That means cleaner air for neighborhoods near highways and distribution centers, areas that have historically borne the health burden of heavy truck traffic.
The companies call this deployment a demonstration of "what's possible when innovation meets a shared vision for a lower-carbon future for transportation." For once, that kind of corporate speak actually matches reality on the ground.
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Based on reporting by Electrek
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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