Transdev Netherlands says VDL bus batteries it is operating have gotten another use
Intensively used batteries taken from VDL Bus & Coach electric buses are getting a second life in ‘project Anubis’.
This initiative of energy company RWE and VDL Bus & Coach revolves around the sustainable and circular use of raw materials, in this case bus batteries, in a central storage system in Moerdijk in the Netherlands.
The transportation sector will change rapidly from highly fossil fuel-dependent to electric in the coming years. Assuming that all buses and increasing numbers of cars and lorries in the Netherlands will run on electricity after 2030, more than 150,000 tons of batteries will become available for recycling every year. These are currently classified as waste and mostly taken to recycling plants abroad.
In project Anubis, we are initially using batteries taken from 43 electric VDL buses operated by Transdev in Eindhoven since 2016,” VDL Bus & Coach CEO Paul van Vuuren says.
“These vehicles are currently getting new and larger battery packs, but the used batteries still have enough capacity to be used in stationary applications. In Europe, we are one of the forerunners in the field of electric public transport. Providing a sustainable circular solution for our batteries is part of our strategy.
“However, its application still requires a lot of new knowledge and development. Together with RWE, we will therefore collect a lot of data in ‘project Anubis’ so that we can contribute even more to making our society even more sustainable.”
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The 43 batteries from the VDL electric buses operated by Transdev Netherlands, with a total storage capacity of 7.5 megawatts, will be coupled into one battery at the RWE power plant in Moerdijk. RWE is also working on battery projects in Germany, United Kingdom and the United States. RWE’s ambition is to grow capacity to three gigawatts in the coming years.
RWE is at the forefront of developing projects that contribute to a successful energy transition. Besides balancing the supply and demand of (renewable) energy, battery systems are also ideally suited for stabilizing the energy network, due to their fast response time.
The aim of project Anubis is to demonstrate and validate an innovative stationary energy storage system based on bus batteries. This will enable the large-scale rollout of such projects, thus contributing to the circular economy in the Netherlands. In the coming years, many batteries are expected to return from electric vehicles.
“These are important conditions for making our energy supply more sustainable. With project Anubis, RWE and VDL are demonstrating that technical challenges related to the construction and operation of plants like this can be overcome,” RWE Generation Roger Miesen says.
“And with this project, we are actively contributing to a reduction in CO2 because after an initial phase in the VDL buses, the batteries will have an extended life at RWE. After that, they will undergo high-quality recycling.”