Renault, Volvo Group companion on industrial EVs to be ‘Tesla of vans’

Renault, Volvo Group companion on industrial EVs to be ‘Tesla of vans’

Renault, Volvo Group companion on industrial EVs to be ‘Tesla of vans’

Renault and lorry maker the Volvo Group have established a brand new start-up that goals to flip the European industrial car sector on its head with a variety of extremely modular electrical vans.

Called Flexis, it goals to capitalise on development in demand for zero-emission industrial autos, which is predicted by its creators to rise by 40% every year till 2030.

Explaining its ambitions, Renault Group CEO Luca de Meo mentioned: “This is the Tesla of the commercial vehicle in a way. That’s the way you have to see it.”

The first Flexis mannequin – a part of a three-van line-up teased in a press convention – might be launched in 2026. Based on a bespoke skateboard structure, it was promised by de Meo to “completely transform” the frequent notion of a van.

“It’s not a white box on wheels with a diesel engine any more,” he mentioned.

It might be a “step-in van” designed round last-mile deliveries in metropolis centres, prioritising how effectively it makes use of area in addition to outright manoeuvrability. It could have a footprint roughly according to the present Renault Kangoo however with a a lot taller roofline to provide a complete cargo capability matching the Renault Trafic from the phase above.

Those tight proportions may even make sure the van has a turning circle on a par with B-segment superminis, Renault prompt.

Flexis has additionally labored intently with logistics corporations to optimise the inside packaging of its vans, with French freight agency CMA CGM taking a ten% stake within the enterprise.

De Meo mentioned this method was impressed by Rivian, which developed its electric van with Amazon, and not too long ago failed start-up Arrival, which partnered with UPS and Post Office.

The Flexis vans’ interiors have been designed to avoid wasting as a lot time for his or her operators as attainable.

De Meo defined: “We have been attempting to get each second out of interplay between the motive force and the van, as a result of each 30 seconds that you simply save in a supply we estimate is [worth an extra] 1% profitability for the logistics operator.

“So you get into the van from the side; you don’t have to go back and open the door. You will have a mechanism to order the packages based on the delivery route. Everything will be like this, because 30 seconds is 1% profitability.”

Flexis CEO Philippe Divry mentioned that ease of operation can also be a key consideration. He elaborated: “Quite a lot of logistics corporations see their drivers altering jobs after 12-18 months, so it’s important to think about altering your complete workforce each 12-18 months.

“If we can make our vehicle more easy to drive, more friendly for people who deliver 100 or 150 packages a day, and we can keep them longer on the job, that’s much more value, much less disturbance in the customer’s operation.”