The order for Sør-Rogaland applies to 173 buses of the Volvo 7700, Volvo 8500 and Volvo 8700 type. It pertains mainly to low-entry buses with a length of either 12 meters or 14.5 meters, as well as two-axle 12-meter low-floor buses and 18-meter articulated buses. The order also includes three double-deckers based on Volvo’s well-proven B9TL double-decker chassis. The buses will be fitted with 7-liter, 9-liter and 12-liter engines, and certain buses will have Volvo Buses’ 9-liter engine that is fueled by natural gas.
Reduced environmental impact
The order has distinct environmental characteristics. Since Volvo has chosen catalytic conversion of exhaust fumes, the engines will obviously meet today’s stringent exhaust fume requirements in accordance with Euro 4. At the same time, the choice of technology also means that fuel consumption will be reduced, which reduces emissions of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. The order also includes 35 gas-fueled buses, with emission levels that are lower than those stipulated in Euro 5, thus meeting a requirement that will not be enacted until 2009.
The agreement includes a clause under which the Volvo dealer Rieber Thorsen Buss og Last AS will account for all maintenance of the buses for a period of five years, with a possible extension of the maintenance contract by up to 3.5 years. Most of the maintenance will be conducted in Stavanger, Sandnes and Egersund.
In addition to the delivery to Veolia Transport Sør AS, there is also an option for delivery of 10-15 Volvo 8700s and Volvo’s new tourist coach Volvo 9700 to other parts of the Veolia company in Norway.
“Veolia is one of the largest public transport operators in the world today,” says Gunnar Mykland”, Head of Volvo Buses in Norway. “I believe that the favorable relations that we at Volvo Buses have established with Veolia Transport here in Norway and in many other parts of Europe have contributed to our securing this order.
“It’s all about being able to trust each other, which is a prerequisite for placing an order as large as this one.”
The buses will be manufactured at Volvo’s plants in Borås and Säffle, Sweden, in Wroclaw, Poland, and in Finland. All diesel buses will be delivered this year, while the gas-fueled buses will be delivered during spring 2008.
June 19, 2007
For further information, please contact Gunnar Mykland, Head of Volvo Buses Norway, +47 90891223, or Per-Martin Johansson, press officer, +46 31 322 52 00, per-martin.johansson@volvo.com