'It sounds like a great great plan': P.E.I. Green Party supports electric school buses - Action News
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PEI

'It sounds like a great great plan': P.E.I. Green Party supports electric school buses

The governments plan to buy electric school buses for the province in the coming years was announced by Premier Dennis King Monday night and already has the approval of P.E.I.s Green Party.

King commits to electric school buses for P.E.I.

School bus.
The province says electric school buses will also be used for public transportation in rural parts of the province. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

The government's plan to switch its entire fleet of about 300school buses in the province to electric power in the coming years has a preliminary stamp ofapproval fromP.E.I.'s Green Party, the Official Opposition.

Premier Dennis King committed to the move in his state-of-the-province address Monday evening.

Inthis year's capital budget, government had already committed to buying one electric bus as a pilot project for this fall, along with 30 gas-powered buses.

"The intent is to phase in the electric buses more aggressively in the coming school years in an effort to electrify the fleet, along with the necessary charging infrastructure to support them," a provincial government spokespersonsaid in an email to CBC News Tuesday.

The province said buses take22,000 Island students to and from school every day and make upthe largest public transit system on the Island.

The province plans to use the electric buses for other purposes, too.

"We anticipate being able to also use the electric school buses as part of an initiative to offer public transportation in rural P.E.I. when the buses are not being used to transport students," saida spokesperson for the province said in an email to CBC News Tuesday.

"On the surface it sounds like a great great plan," said Steve Howard, Opposition Transportation critic.

ButHoward said he'd like to see more details about how theplan will be implemented.

1st bus this fall

"It's one thing to make the announcement and have the intent. It's another thing to have the action and the work happen properly as well," Howard said.

Steve Howard, transportation critic for the Green Party, says he'd like to see more details on how the plan will be implemented. (Al McCormick/CBC)

Howard said he thinks there aresome logistical issuesto be worked out if the province plans to usethe buses for public transit.

"These are big buses that you're going to have driving around in rural areas. Soyou know, we need drivers, we need to make sure the roads are suitable for these larger vehicles to get around in rural areas there's just extra considerations," he said.

And Howardsaid there areopportunities for the government to use the buses in other ways.

"They're big batteries in these things. You never know, they could be electrical assets at the end of their life," he said. "There's all sorts of avenues that can be explored here."

"I'd be interested to see where government plans to go with it."

Even if government bought 30 new electric buses each year it would take a decade to turn over the whole fleet of about 300.

King saidhe hopes a lot of the conversions will be completed during his government's current mandate.

Last fall the province bought42new school busesat a cost of $4.4 million the buses were safer and run on cleaner-burning gasoline rather than diesel, producing7.2 per cent feweremissions.Each of those 70-passenger buses cost about $100,000.

Thereis no word yet from the province on how much a new electric fleet may cost, but King said using the buses for school and public transportation will helpP.E.I. qualify for federal infrastructure funding for thebuses.

More from CBC P.E.I.

With files from Kerry Campbell