First Bus, one of the UK's largest public transport operators, has begun a smart charging pilot at its electric bus depots. Rather than charging buses at fixed times, the system dynamically coordinates charging sessions to coincide with periods when renewable energy — such as wind and solar — is most abundant on the grid.
The approach addresses one of the central challenges of the energy transition: integrating variable renewable generation without destabilising the grid. By shifting demand to times of surplus clean power, First Bus's depots effectively act as flexible loads that absorb excess electricity which might otherwise be curtailed or wasted.
Electric bus fleets are well-suited to this kind of grid-responsive operation because their daily schedules are predictable and depot dwell times are long enough to allow flexible charging windows. This makes them a valuable tool for transmission system operators (TSOs) seeking to balance supply and demand in real time.
The trial reflects a broader European trend of using EV infrastructure — from private cars to commercial fleets — as active participants in grid management. If successful, the model could be replicated across other UK cities and adopted by operators across the EU, where electrification of public transport is accelerating rapidly.
Source: First Bus uses electric bus depots to support the grid - Electrive (EN)· Based on source, with AI-assisted rewriting.
Related articles

GM bets on sodium-ion storage and V2G at home
At its June 2026 Empower event in San Francisco, GM announced US-developed sodium-ion grid-scale battery storage and software-enabled V2G for existing EV owners — two moves that could reshape how homes and grids store renewable energy.

150 Power Plants: The Hidden Grid Cost of Weakening EU EV Targets
Scaling back the EU's electric vehicle targets could force Europe to build the equivalent of 150 new power plants just to keep the electricity grid balanced. EVs aren't just cars — as mobile battery storage, they are a critical and low-cost tool for integrating solar and wind energy into the grid.

Electric Commuter Bikes: What to Look for in an E-Bike
Electric bikes are becoming a serious option for daily urban commuting across Europe. The right e-bike offers programmable assist levels, a reliable battery, and enough versatility to handle varied terrain.

Battery storage booms, but Australia's grid edge lags behind
Australia's Cheaper Home Batteries Program has added 10.7 GWh of distributed storage to the grid, while EV sales surge to one in six new cars. Yet the country's biggest challenge is no longer on the supply side — it's the low-voltage distribution network that can't keep pace with simultaneous demand from EVs, home batteries and data centres.
Comments
0 commentsBe the first to comment.
