New electric buses forced into storage due to delays upgrading Sydney depots
The delays to upgrading more than a dozen depots complicates the state government’s rollout of more than 1200 electric buses within the next two years.
Upgrading more than a dozen large bus depots across Sydney for electric buses is running significantly behind the NSW transport agency’s plans, which has forced new vehicles bound for one location to be put into storage temporarily.
Confidential Transport for NSW documents show 10 of the 14 depots slated to be upgraded for electric buses are failing to meet targets outlined internally by the agency about 18 months ago, complicating the rollout of more than 1200 new vehicles over the next two years.
Kingsgrove, Leichhardt, Mona Vale and Taren Point depots did not meet plans to be converted by early this year. New electric buses were meant to have been deployed to the Leichhardt depot late last year.
A document marked “sensitive” shows 69 electric buses bound for Kingsgrove had to be put into storage at locations across the city and at the manufacturer’s yard due to “contract and program delays” converting the depot, as well as “performance issues” with the buses and the timing of orders.
A further four depots – Menai, North Sydney, Smeaton Grange and South Granville – have failed to meet targets for upgrades to be well under way by now. Waverley has been partially converted, while upgrade works at Willoughby should be about to start but are not.
Conversion works at Randwick were originally meant to begin by now and be finished by about April next year, but have been delayed significantly.
Construction of a new $230 million depot at Macquarie Park was also previously due to have started in the third quarter of last year and be finished by late next year. However, construction began only several weeks ago and is not expected to be finished until some time in 2028.
Coalition transport spokeswoman Natalie Ward said the government had again botched the delivery of a program that would have enhanced commuters’ lives.
“If the depots are not ready, and we don’t have the capability to charge the new buses, these buses will sit there gathering dust,” she said. “An electric bus needs an electrical source to charge it. Unfortunately for the government, the laws of physics overrule any spin they can put on this one.”
Transport Minister John Graham said the government was rolling out 1700 electric buses and converting depots in a “methodical way, informed by lessons learnt”.
“I’m not sure which bright spark in the former government ordered 50 buses before they worked out how to connect the Kingsgrove depot to electric charging,” he said.
Transport for NSW confirmed that a number of electric buses were temporarily kept out of service due to depot infrastructu
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