Electric Fire Trucks: Slow to Roll Out Despite Early Adopters Like Vancouver
Breaking: Vancouver’s Electric Fire Truck Goes Live – But Sector Lags Behind Other Municipal EVs
Vancouver, BC – The city of Vancouver has officially deployed its first all-electric fire truck, a vehicle now responding to emergencies alongside traditional diesel rigs. The truck, built by Rosenbauer, is part of the city’s push to decarbonize its municipal fleet. However, industry data shows that electric fire trucks are still far behind electric buses, garbage trucks, and drayage fleets in adoption rates.

“This truck is real, it’s on the road, and it’s responding to calls,” said John Henderson, fleet operations manager for Vancouver Fire & Rescue. “But we’re an outlier. Most fire departments are still in the evaluation phase, while garbage trucks and buses have gone mainstream.” The issue is not technology but a combination of high costs, limited range, and rigorous safety certifications unique to firefighting vehicles.
Background: The EV Fire Truck Gap
Electric fire trucks have been in development for years, but only a handful of units are in active service globally. Vancouver’s truck, delivered in early 2023, was part of a pilot project that cost roughly $1.4 million – nearly double that of a conventional fire engine. In contrast, electric buses and garbage trucks have seen mass adoption thanks to predictable routes and centralized charging.
“Buses run fixed routes and can charge overnight at depots,” said Dr. Elena Torres, clean transportation analyst at the Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions. “Fire trucks have unpredictable responses, need to carry heavy pumps and water, and must meet strict NFPA standards. That’s a harder equation.” She notes that orders for electric garbage trucks in North America exceeded 1,300 units in 2023, while fire truck orders were in the dozens.
What This Means for Emergency Response and Emissions
The slow rollout means firefighters and communities will wait longer to see emission reductions from emergency vehicles. Fire trucks, which typically idle at scenes for extended periods, produce significant carbon dioxide and particulate matter. An electric fire truck can cut tailpipe emissions by 90% compared with its diesel counterpart, according to a 2024 report from the International Fire Chiefs Association.
Yet the benefits extend beyond climate. “Electric fire trucks operate more quietly, which improves communication at emergency scenes and reduces noise pollution in neighborhoods,” said Chief Maria Soto, who led a pilot in Los Angeles County. “But until prices drop and charging infrastructure improves for responses that last hours, adoption will be slow.” She calls for federal incentives similar to those for electric school buses, which now enjoy up to $200,000 in rebates per vehicle.
The market is responding. Manufacturers like Rosenbauer, Pierce, and eOne are scaling up production. But experts warn that without policy push, fire trucks will remain a laggard. “We’re seeing the chicken-and-egg problem,” said Torres. “Fewer orders mean higher prices, and higher prices mean fewer orders. It’s a cycle that needs a policy intervention to break.”
As Vancouver’s electric fire truck proves the concept, the challenge now is to accelerate from pilot to mainstream. Fire departments across North America are watching closely – but most are still waiting for the price to come down and the range to go up.
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