NFI showcases a ‘Day in the Life’ video of its electric drayage fleet

A milestone for zero-emission freight as NFI’s battery-electric Class 8 fleet proves reliability in real-world operations.

What you need to know: 

  • New “Day in the Life” video highlights electric drayage trucking between the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach
  • NFI surpasses 10 million miles with battery-electric Class 8 trucks
  • Fleet of Freightliner eCascadia and Volvo VNR Electric models shows electric heavy-duty trucks entering mainstream freight operations
  • Program has scaled to 100+ electric trucks in Southern California with EV charging infrastructure through the JETSI Project

NFI, the Camden, New Jersey–headquartered logistics company, announced last January that its battery-electric trucking program has passed a major milestone: more than 10 million miles driven using battery-electric Class 8 trucks

The fleet is made up largely of Freightliner eCascadia and Volvo VNR Electric Class 8 rigs, and reaching this distance highlights a broader shift in the industry: demonstrating that electric heavy-duty trucks are no longer limited to small test projects but are increasingly being used in routine freight hauling operations.

The milestone demonstrated the company’s ability to expand zero-emission transportation without sacrificing the reliability that’s typically associated with diesel fleets. What began as a pilot in 2019 has grown into more than 100 battery-electric trucks operating across Southern California, supported by the JETSI Project with fast chargers, a dedicated EV maintenance facility, and a solar-plus-storage microgrid.

And now NFI, together with JETSI, has released a “Day in the Life” video that tracks battery-electric truck driver Bilal Abdul-Zahir during a routine drayage shift, hauling freight between the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach and distribution sites in the Golden State’s Inland Empire. 

Read more on Clean Trucking

Funding Partners

JETSI is jointly financed by California Air Resources Board and California Energy Commission ($26.98 million), MSRC ($8 million), and South Coast AQMD ($5.4 million), with an additional $21.7 million from Port of Long Beach, Port of Los Angeles, Southern California Edison, NFI, and Schneider. JETSI is part of California Climate Investments, a statewide program that puts billions of cap-and-trade dollars to work reducing greenhouse gas emissions, strengthening the economy, and improving public health and the environment, particularly in disadvantaged communities.