Job Site Advantages of Electric Equipment
Sustainability in the construction industry
is being advanced by the public and private sectors. Governments are adopting
more clean-air regulations at local and regional levels and companies are
adopting sustainability policies and asking partners to help them meet their
targets.
Consequently, many manufacturers have
already developed – or are in the process of developing – electric-powered
construction equipment to meet increasing emissions regulations, provide
efficiency improvements, and lower operating costs. All electric,
electric/hydraulic, and battery-operated versions rival their diesel and gas
counterparts in performance, notes Joel Honeyman, vice president of global
innovation at Bobcat.
"People say electric machines are not
going to perform as well as a diesel machine," Honeyman says. "That
is simply not true. In many cases, they can outperform them.
"Many people are so used to what they
have and are afraid of new technology. Some companies have been running diesel-
and gas-powered equipment for 40, 50 years. Hydraulics have been on equipment
for 80 years. Adjusting to an electric-powered machine is quite a paradigm
shift."
"We see electric-powered technologies
and their applications spilling into our industry," says Honeyman.
"Look at what is happening in the auto industry. Tesla has really driven
the battery electric concept and an entire industry is shifting."
Honeyman adds that green construction
technology is only getting better and smarter with new machine and equipment
applications and opportunities.
Among the many advantages of
electrification, says Honeyman, are "noise and vibration reduction,
instantaneous power, and software features that are otherwise unavailable with
a diesel engine and hydraulics."
Matt Sagaser, director of innovation accelerated
at Bobcat's Acceleration Center adds that "the software features allow us
to advance and accelerate the technology. We are doing it in a way that is more
efficient and cost-effective, and beyond expectations from a power perspective.
Overall, our electric innovations allow us to offer customers an experience
they may not have previously imagined.
"We could have very easily removed the
diesel engine and replaced it with a battery. Instead, our innovation team,
which leads this project, wanted to see what other advantages we could achieve
if we made it all electric and removed the hydraulics as well. That opened up a
lot of possibilities."
Honeyman, along with Sagaser, will hold an
education session - "Electrifying the Future: Get Plugged In" - at CONEXPO-CON/AGG
2023. They will examine the advantages of electric construction equipment
beyond just being "green." They will also discuss what an
all-electric platform allows construction equipment manufacturers to do.