Electric Fire Trucks Gain Ground, But Speed of Adoption Trails Municipal Peers
Breaking: Electric Fire Trucks Enter Service, But Fleet Electrification Lags Behind Buses and Garbage Trucks
Vancouver has deployed an operational electric fire truck—a first for a major North American city. The vehicle is now part of the municipal fleet, responding to real emergencies. However, this milestone underscores a slower adoption rate compared to other electric municipal vehicles like buses, garbage trucks, and drayage fleets.

"While we are proud to put this truck on the road, the pace of electrification for emergency vehicles is still sluggish," said Dr. Elena Torres, a fleet electrification analyst at GreenTech Research. "We see far more electric buses and garbage trucks in service globally."
Background
Electric fire trucks have been in development for years, but the first production models are only now entering active duty. Vancouver's truck is built by a major OEM and can run entirely on battery power for most calls, saving fuel and reducing emissions.
Meanwhile, electric bus fleets have grown by over 400% globally since 2020, and electric garbage trucks are common in cities like Seattle and Los Angeles. Drayage trucks at ports are also converting faster due to stricter air quality regulations.
"Fire trucks face unique challenges—they need massive power output, long idling times, and heavy equipment," explained Mark Chen, a fire chief in the Pacific Northwest. "Buses and garbage trucks have simpler duty cycles, so they have benefited from earlier technology advances."
What This Means
The slower electrification of fire fleets means municipal decarbonization goals may be harder to reach. Fire trucks typically run on diesel and can idle for hours at emergency scenes, producing significant emissions.
City planners are now pushing for faster adoption, but cost and range remain barriers. A single electric fire truck can cost twice as much as a diesel counterpart. "We need to invest in charging infrastructure and battery durability before we see widespread use," said Torres.
Despite the lag, Vancouver's milestone proves the technology works. As battery costs continue to drop, other cities are expected to place orders within the next two years. The race to electrify emergency response is officially on.
For more on electric fleet adoption, see our coverage of electric buses and electric garbage trucks.
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