
Electric Trucks Hit 20 Million Miles Across North America
Over 1,100 electric trucks and buses have collectively driven 20 million emission-free miles, proving clean transportation works for everyday commerce. The milestone comes as two former rivals merge to accelerate the shift away from diesel.
Electric trucks aren't just a dream anymore. They're quietly racking up millions of real-world miles delivering packages, transporting goods, and moving people across North America.
Workhorse Group just announced its fleet of over 1,100 electric trucks, buses, and shuttles has surpassed 20 million miles on the road. These aren't experimental vehicles sitting in a lab. They're working trucks making deliveries in snow, heat, and everything in between.
The achievement comes at a pivotal moment. A few months ago, Workhorse and Motiv Electric Trucks, once competitors in the electric truck market, merged to form a $105 million company. Instead of fighting over a small market, they're teaming up to make electric trucking mainstream.
Scott Griffith, Workhorse's CEO, says medium-duty trucks are the sweet spot for electrification. These vehicles handle predictable routes, return to the same depot for charging, and spend their days in cities where air quality matters most.
The company has learned crucial lessons over the past decade. They've figured out how to maximize battery range through smart route planning and build cost-effective charging stations at truck depots. They've trained technicians and drivers, solved cold-weather challenges, and refined maintenance schedules.

Workhorse even runs its own delivery service in Ohio, operating both electric and gas-powered vans side by side. This real-world testing ground provides hard data on how electric trucks actually perform compared to traditional ones.
The W56 and EPIC4 trucks rolling off assembly lines in Union City, Indiana include step vans, school buses, shuttles, box trucks, and refrigerated vehicles. Production is happening now, not years from now.
The Ripple Effect
Every mile these trucks drive means cleaner air for neighborhoods along their routes. Kids waiting for school buses, families living near delivery depots, and workers in warehouse districts all breathe easier when diesel exhaust disappears.
The 20 million miles represent more than distance traveled. They prove electric trucks can handle the demands of daily commerce while cutting pollution. As Griffith notes, these vehicles safely and reliably transport the goods and people that keep the economy moving.
The company is already designing its next generation platform with flexibility for future technologies like advanced safety features and autonomous driving capabilities. The goal is transforming trucks from simple machines into connected, intelligent vehicles that get smarter over time.
Twenty million miles down, and the journey toward cleaner transportation is just getting started.
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Based on reporting by Google: electric vehicle milestone
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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