Lots of the truck news at present seems all about electric trucks. There is plenty going by the truck manufacturers to make sure that they are ready for the deadlines impose by Brussels. Whether the charging infrastructure will catch up remains to be seen, but is seems that the German truckmakers will be able to meet demand. Mercedes have started to take orders for their long haul tractor unit for delivery from the end of 2024, whilst MAN have started construction on a building that will make up to 100,000 batteries by 2025. Sales of the new MAN eTruck will start on October 30 this year, with the first units rolling out to selected customers in 2024 and large scale production destined for 2025. The in-house production of battery packs at MAN’s Nuremberg site plays an important role in their electrification strategy.

These batteries will be destined for the new MAN eTruck, suitable for long-distance transport, plus the city buses and, in future, coaches.

“The mobility shift toward electrically powered road haulage is changing the entire industry in an unprecedented way. MAN is actively helping to shape the change. Our transformation into a provider of sustainable and intelligent transport solutions is visible everywhere in the Company – especially here in Nuremberg. With the efficient realignment of the company and the sustainable conversion of the entire production network, we have made a major leap toward the future in the last two years. The market launch of our new MAN eTruck now in October is an essential milestone in this regard, and batteries from Nuremberg are the key enabler for its large-scale production from 2025,” says Kobriger.

A good two years after the decision was made in favour of Nuremberg as the site for future battery volume production, MAN has started construction of the battery building. Up to now, batteries have been produced at the site in manual small-batch production. In the future, 350 new jobs will be created on a total area of just over 16,000 square meters, as well as intelligently linked assembly and logistics facilities. The development of large-scale battery production, including the new building, involves investments in logistics, infrastructure, buildings and production facilities totalling around 100 million euros.

MAN Factory shot
Got to love a cheesy press shot – (from left): Dr. Ingo Essel, Plant Manager MAN Nuremberg, Markus Wansch, Chairman of the Works Council MAN Nuremberg, Michael Kobriger, Executive Board Member for Production and Logistics MAN Truck & Bus SE, Marcus König, Mayor of the City of Nuremberg, Dr. Andrea Heilmaier, Economics and Science Officer City of Nuremberg, Barbara Fuchs, Economic Policy Spokesperson for the Green Party in the Bavarian State Parliament, Ulrich Zimmer, Site Manager MAN Nuremberg.

Strong partnerships pave the way for electromobility

The expertise for the development and production of high-voltage battery packs has already been built up at the Nuremberg site since 2020, and the electric competencies of the employees are being successively expanded within the framework of small-series production and a prototype area. By the end of 2024, the first customer vehicles will still be served from this small series, before the batteries from the new large-scale production will be available from 2025 for the electric truck production in Munich, which will then also be ramped up in large quantities. The new battery-electric drives require increased knowledge and expertise not only in production but also in development. In addition to support and funding from the Free State of Bavaria, MAN’s Nuremberg site is building strong partnerships with local universities in the area of research and development. At the beginning of 2023, the “Campus Future Driveline” was inaugurated on the Nuremberg plant site. There, MAN developers are working together with students and professors from the Friedrich Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg (FAU) and the Nuremberg University of Technology Georg Simon Ohm (Ohm) on projects in the areas of batteries, hydrogen combustion engines, and fuel cells.

MAN eTruck: Logistics practice already in series development

To ensure that electric trucks can replace today’s diesel vehicles as quickly as possible, MAN’s top priority is to ensure their unrestricted practicality right from the start of series production. To this end, MAN established its own transport company, LoadFox Transport Solutions GmbH, in December 2022 in order to test and optimize the new technology in real-world operation on common internal plant logistics routes at an early stage. Since the beginning of October, the first fully electric MAN eTrucks have been operating between the German sites in Munich, Dachau, Nuremberg, and Salzgitter. At a later date, transports to the Polish sites in Krakow and Starachowice will be added. In addition to the intensive use of battery-electric vehicles in real factory traffic, LoadFox will also increasingly integrate autonomous driving functions into logistics practice from 2024. “Through the targeted collection of data and experience in practical use, we can significantly accelerate the development and quality checks of hardware and software for future products and services with LoadFox,” says Florian Hagemann, Managing Director of LoadFox GmbH, explaining the advantages that result from the innovative concept for product development.

With this fine-tuning from the logistics process, the new MAN eTruck will roll out to the first customers in 2024. Thanks to its preparation for the megawatt charging standard, which is expected to be available from 2025, it will achieve daily ranges of between 600 and 800 kilometers suitable for long-distance transport, and in the future even up to 1,000 kilometers with just one intermediate charge during the driver’s 45-minute break from driving. But the new MAN eTruck will also easily cover most of the other typical transport tasks of today’s trucks, such as low-noise and emission-free waste disposal in the city or collecting milk from organic farmers with an electric food tanker.