Proterra has announced that SEPTA, Foothill Transit and King County Metro have won Federal Transit Administration (FTA) Low or No Emission Vehicle Deployment Grants. The Low-No grant winners will use their funds to purchase 33 Catalyst buses and charging infrastructure, bringing Proterra's total number of orders to 155 vehicles from 16 transit agencies across the United States. Proterra customers won 33 of the 55 buses awarded under this program. With new and existing Proterra customers building their zero-emission vehicle fleets, this announcement underscores the rising demand for Proterra zero-emission battery-electric buses and highlights that the electric bus market is going mainstream.
As one of the largest transit agencies in the United States, serving 3.9 million people in five counties in and around Philadelphia, the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) will receive $2,585,075 from FTA and use the funds to purchase 25 Proterra Catalyst buses and five overhead chargers. SEPTA will be procuring more zero-emission vehicles with less Low-No funding than any other grant recipient, which is a testament to SEPTA's electric vehicle vision and state of the EV bus market. Proterra zero-emission buses will be deployed on Routes 29 and 79 in South Philadelphia.
"SEPTA is excited to be able to move forward with the purchase of 25 emission-free electric buses from Proterra," said SEPTA Board Chairman Pasquale T. Deon. "SEPTA already has one of the greenest bus fleets in the nation, with over half of our vehicles operating diesel-electric hybrids. The addition of electric buses furthers our commitment to a sustainable future for our riders and local residents."
On the heels of completing one of the most rigorous performance tests in the industry, King County Metro Transit, serving the greater area of Seattle Washington, will now be able to fully electrify two routes using new funds from FTA's Low-No Program for eight additional Proterra Catalyst vehicles. This award will increase KCM's battery-electric fleet to 11 Catalyst vehicles. Proterra's first customer and the first agency in the U.S. to operate EV buses in revenue service, Foothill Transit, also received Low-No grant funding that will go towards electric charging facilities and support the transit agency's ongoing electric bus program. Foothill Transit, which serves more than 14 million customers in Los Angeles County, will be getting 13 Proterra Catalyst buses from a previous order this year, bringing Foothill's all-electric fleet to nearly 10 percent of the transit agency's total.
"This award is a big win for Proterra and the industry alike because it signals continued market demand for zero-emission vehicles," said Ryan Popple, CEO of Proterra. "We are pleased to be supporting SEPTA, Foothill Transit and King County Metro in their electrification efforts and are committed to designing and manufacturing state-of-the-art, zero-emission buses that ultimately save our customers time and money."