The Fuel Efficiency of Law Enforcement Vehicles

I live in Durham, where the ELF is built. The ELF is a pedal-and-electric-powered reverse tricycle with an egg-shaped body and a solar panel roof. It is certainly unique. A 360-degree view is available here. Organic Transit, the company that builds the ELF, states that it “gets the equivalent of 1800 m.p.g.”

What does this have to do with criminal law? Well, the company recently introduced the Tactical ELF, designed to “give[] [law enforcement agencies] the tactical advantage for community policing.” An endorsement from Duke’s campus police comments that “It’s like a small patrol car.” I doubt that the ELF is going to be a mainstream law enforcement vehicle anytime soon, but it did get me thinking about the fuel efficiency of law enforcement vehicles generally. This post summarizes what I learned.

The Crown Vic is a gas guzzler. Historically the most popular law enforcement vehicle has been the Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor, last produced in 2011 and still in use in many agencies. The 2011 model is EPA rated for 16 m.p.g. in city driving, but due to the large amount of idling inherent to police use, many agencies see more like 6 to 8 m.p.g.

More recent options aren’t much better. Whether you’re concerned about government spending, climate change, or dependence on foreign oil, 6 to 8 m.p.g. isn’t too good. Yet despite occasional claims that newer police vehicles are designed for fuel economy, the current top sellers are not much different from the Crown Vic:

  • The best-selling law enforcement vehicle last year was the Ford Police Interceptor Utility SUV, based on the Explorer. It is EPA rated for 16 m.p.g city, just like the Crown Vic, and its highway rating is actually lower than the Crown Vic’s, 21 m.p.g. compared to 24 m.p.g.
  • Ford’s law enforcement sedan offering is the Interceptor Sedan, EPA rated for 18 m.p.g. city and 25 m.p.g. highway.
  • GM’s offerings include the Tahoe Police Pursuit Vehicle, rated for 16 m.p.g. city and 23 m.p.g. highway, and the Caprice Police Pursuit Vehicle, rated for 18 m.p.g. city and 26 m.p.g. highway with a V-6 engine, less than that for the V-8). Here’s the GM brochure.

 

Some of the new models purport to be more efficient at idle than the Crown Vic. But any improvement in efficiency looks to be evolutionary, not revolutionary.

There are alternatives. In 2013, the Urban Institute issued this report about reducing fuel consumption in law enforcement vehicles. It argues that hybrid vehicles could save law enforcement agencies $4,323 per vehicle per year compared to conventional gas-powered vehicles. The report identifies a number of jurisdictions that have begun using hybrids. Specifically, it notes that New York City already has over 1,000 hybrid patrol vehicles on the road, returning triple the gas mileage of gas-powered vehicles and apparently receiving good reviews from officers. The NYPD seems to have continued to move towards hybrids, as this 2014 city report notes that there are now over 1,500 police hybrids, and that they have been more reliable and less expensive in total operating costs than comparable non-hybrid vehicles.

There are fewer all-electric vehicles in police use, but there are a few. Here is a story about a Nissan Leaf used in Kingsport, TN. The Los Angeles Police Department is evaluating electric motorcycles. And Atherton, CA, a Silicon Valley town with a median home price of $6.7 million, is at least thinking about getting Teslas for the police. Things are different in California!

Reasons to stay the course. Agencies may prefer traditional, large, gas-powered vehicles for a variety of reasons, including lower initial purchase costs, familiarity, interior volume, perceived collision safety, and speed. Also, officers may prefer the perception that comes with patrolling in a large SUV rather than, for example, a Toyota Prius.

Some North Carolina agencies are making the switch. According to news reports, several North Carolina agencies have determined that it is worthwhile to move to more efficient vehicles:

  • Asheville has a Chevy Volt patrol car that is returning 130 m.p.g.
  • Raleigh has multiple propane-powered patrol cars.
  • Buncombe County has also converted several Crown Vics to propane power.
  • As noted above, Duke has an ELF

 

I didn’t see any news reports about hybrid police vehicles in the state, which surprised me. But I suspect that there are many agencies with efficient vehicles that aren’t included on the list. Feel free to post a comment if you’re aware of others.

Local governments generally are changing vehicle types. For non-law-enforcement use, local governments are moving quickly towards hybrids and other efficient cars. The parking lot here at the School of Government is a constant flow of city- and county-owned Chevy Volts, hybrid Ford Fusions, Nissan Leaf electric vehicles, and others. (I haven’t seen an ELF here yet, but perhaps that day will come.)

Readers, what do you think? Should law enforcement agencies move towards more efficient vehicles, or are large conventional vehicles necessary for police duty? Is the best option a combination of the two? Have any agencies made, or are any agencies considering making, a major commitment to more efficient vehicles? What have officers’ experiences been?

9 thoughts on “The Fuel Efficiency of Law Enforcement Vehicles”

  1. As a member of law enforcement I think part of the perception issue is that a lot of the hybrid vehicles, until recently, were lower top-speeds, and lower acceleration, than traditional gasoline engines. Police vehicles are primarily a pursuit vehicle – for overtaking speeding cars on the highways, or arriving quickly to emergency scenes. The idea of sacrificing top speed or initial acceleration for fuel efficiency is something that a lot of cops probably find hard to overcome. The longer it takes to reach a speed at which I can overtake a car going 85 in a 65 the longer I’m endangering myself or other motorists who freak out every time they hear a police siren.

    The other issue has been the upfront cost associated with a hybrid vehicle, which typically cost a few thousand more than a traditional vehicle. Especially over the last decade with the economy downturn municipalities have seen their tax base shrink, and that has resulted in budgets being trimmed, even for public safety, by a LOT. The fact that departments have less money doesn’t mean their cars are wearing out any slower, though, so the idea of only buying 9 hybrids instead of 11 traditional vehicles is simple mathematics that they can’t ignore.

    In the future I do see more and more agencies going to hybrid technology as it becomes more mainstream and cost effective, but for the immediate future (think next 5-10 years) I don’t see a large shift that way. On a minor scale agencies are going to test things out and perhaps buy one or two hybrids to see how efficient they are, and if they are suited for the tasks at hand. Some police work could be done with hybrids (think, detectives, who don’t respond to emergencies as they occur, or stop vehicles), but the majority of every department is patrol oriented, and I don’t know that that will ever go to hybrid in my life time.

    Reply
  2. Has it occurred to you all yet that these so-called hybrid vehicles are DIRTIER than your standard motor vehicles?

    Why?

    Because the ELECTRICITY that you are using to charge them comes from COAL FIRED PLANTS that produce the electricity in the first place.

    Hybrid vehicles are just more liberal lunacy.

    Think for yourselves people. Don’t just fall prey to liberal talking points over true logic.

    Reply
    • While I’ll refuse to address your infantile partisan insults, I’ll address your remark about hybrids being dirtier. Realize that a “hybrid” car consists of an internal combustion engine and an electric motor powered by a battery. And also take note that the battery is charged by the internal combustion engine – an inherently “dirty” process.

      The true “dirtiness” of hybrids is a result of the process of mining raw materials for the batteries, shipping raw materials and parts across the planet, and assembling them. Not to mention the waste that’s produced if the batteries can not be properly recycled at the end of their life.

      I’ll dare to assume that you were originally referring to pure electric vehicles and the “dirty” way in which they’re powered. Yes, if the electricity does not come from a renewable source, there can be a byproduct (pollution). But power plants – regardless of the source of their power – can produce electricity on a large scale and with greater efficiency than a lone internal combustion engine running off gasoline.

      So, get your facts straight before you start pointing fingers and lobbing words like “lunacy.”

      Reply
    • Mark’s comment explains how regular hybrids only use the ICE for battery power, not an external source. He also states how plug-in hybrids and electric vehicles plug into mixed sources — some dirty, some clean — while the ICE is always powered by a dirty source: oil.

      Few point out, however, that, regardless of where electric vehicles get their power from, they have ZERO tailpipe emissions. This means a tremendous improvement in air quality – no vehicle exhaust means no toxic chemicals that we breathe daily in traffic and cause illnesses such as cancer and asthma over time. That’s not liberal or conservative, that’s plain good.

      Reply
  3. One thng not mentioned in teh article is teh amopunt of electronic gear in a standard police car. Radios, sirens, lightbars, computers, etc.. all draw power from the vehicle. How would a hybrid or electric vehicle handle that? Imagine sitting for hurs directing traffic with yur lights on. How would a hybrid do in that scenario? I see where the article said NYPD has hybrids/electrics. but are those frontline cars or administrative vehicles in the fleet? As the previous post said, budgets are being cut and we just don’t have the funds to do “feel good” things especially when the cost is so much more than conventional vehicles. I’m not opposed to hybrid/electric vehicles but there are times when the mission requires the right tools.

    Reply

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