• Get In Touch
  • Give
  • Get In Touch
  • Give

Search

  • A-Z Index
  • Map

Center for Transportation Research

  • About
    • Programs & Centers
      • Advanced Mobility Innovation Lab
      • Transportation Planning
      • Freight-Related Analytics
      • #Get Convinced – Teen Driving Safety Program
      • TN MUG
      • TN Vans
      • ISSE
      • CR2C2
      • See more…
    • Labs & Equipment
    • News
      • Events/Training
      • News Articles
    • Events
  • Impact
    • Annual Reports
    • TRB 2025
    • Journal
    • Publications
    • Conference Proceedings
    • Presentations
    • TEAM TN Research
    • Technical Reports
  • People
    • Leadership
    • Staff
    • Affiliated Faculty
    • Graduate Research Assistants
    • Undergraduate Research Assistants
  • Training
    • TTAP Training
    • Traffic Signal Academy
    • Railroad Education & Training
    • Course Calendar
  • Institute for Future Mobility
  • Join Us

EVs are heavier than gas cars, but are they harder on roads?

EVs are heavier than gas cars, but are they harder on roads?

March 11, 2024

Alberta wants EV owners to pull their own weight when it comes to paying for road maintenance – but battery-electric passenger vehicles, while considerably heavier than their gas-powered counterparts, are far from the heaviest vehicles on the road, experts said.

“For pavement, the biggest cause of damage is large transport trucks,” Kevin Heaslip, director of the University of Tennessee’s Center for Transportation Research, said in an email.

Alberta’s latest budget added a $200 annual tax for EV owners, which it said will cover extra wear and tear on the roads. The province said the fee is meant to mirror the amount of fuel tax paid annually by the typical Alberta driver.

EVs won’t cause roads to crumble faster, but our love of heavier cars is causing problems

So, how much heavier are EVs than similar gas-powered vehicles?

Last year, Heaslip told Politifact that EVs often weigh 30 per cent more than comparable gas-powered vehicles because of their batteries.

Read the full article here

Filed Under: News Tagged With: News

Innovative solutions for the future of mobility.

News

Events

Get in Touch

Give

Center for Transportation Research

Tickle College of Engineering

600 Henley Street, Suite 309
Knoxville, TN 37996-4133
Phone: 865-974-5255
Email: ctr@utk.edu

The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996
865-974-1000

The flagship campus of the University of Tennessee System and partner in the Tennessee Transfer Pathway.

ADA Privacy Safety Title IX