LOS ANGELES -- DHL Group's StreetScooter electric vehicle unit will enter the U.S. market next year as delivery companies and municipalities work to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
DHL will debut StreetScooter's full-electric Work L delivery van in two urban U.S. markets, one on each coast, starting in spring 2020, it said without specifying which markets would be the first.
Full deployment could come in 2022 and 2023, said Ulrich Stuhec, StreetScooter's chief technology officer, who joined the company from Ford Motor in October.
DHL is part of the German postal giant, Deutsche Post.
Los Angeles, London, Berlin, Tokyo and 30 other cities around the globe have been working to establish zero-emission zones by 2030. Those cities hope to curb accumulating greenhouse gases that contribute to extreme weather, higher temperatures and rising sea levels, which have steep economic, environmental and human costs.
The transportation industry - which includes fossil fuel-burning ships, trains, trucks and planes - accounted for 14 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions in 2010, according to the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Over the last three years, DHL has launched "CO2-free last mile delivery" efforts with German cities such as Berlin, Hamburg and Munich.
Roughly 10,000 of the 12,000 StreetScooter electric vehicles on the road make DHL deliveries. They operate in Amsterdam, Vienna and cities around Germany - saving roughly 36,000 metric tons of CO2 per truck each year, StreetScooter said.
"We have the most experience on the road while others are still working on their first prototypes," StreetScooter's Stuhec said in a recent interview.
Up-and-coming delivery competitor Amazon in September gave the electric vehicle industry a jolt with its plan to order 100,000 electric delivery vans from Rivian Automotive, a company it funds. The first vans should hit streets in 2021. Meanwhile, Amazon said its delivery partners are using around 200 electric vehicles.
United Parcel Service has 1,000 electric and hybrid electric vehicles in its fleet, and FedEx last year announced plans to deploy 1,000 electric vehicles in California.
DHL fully acquired StreetScooter in 2014. The unprofitable subsidiary is seeking new investors and customers to further ramp production. Current partners include the United Kingdom's Milk & More, which ordered 200 trucks, and Japanese delivery firm Yamato, which has started to deploy 500 planned vehicles.
In September, StreetScooter began moves to enter the world's biggest electric vehicle market - signing a memorandum of understanding with Chinese automaker Chery to begin electric van production in 2021.