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City study finds many commercial electric landscaping tools are ready; recommends phased pilots, vendor training and incentives
Summary
A market study commissioned by Austin Climate Action & Resilience and Parks & Recreation found electric handheld tools and small mowers generally market‑ready, while larger riding mowers and heavy‑duty saws face battery and charging constraints; it recommends phased pilots, vendor training in procurement, life‑cycle cost analysis, and potential rebate/trade‑in programs.
Consultants for the city told the Joint Sustainability Committee that electrifying commercial‑grade landscaping equipment could reduce noise, localized air pollution and maintenance burdens for operators, but that readiness varies by equipment type.
Jen Krieger of Terra Lumina Consulting said her team interviewed roughly 85 people from 38 organizations and found strong user enthusiasm for electric handheld tools (string trimmers, smaller leaf blowers) and many smaller mowers, while larger riding mowers, heavy chainsaws and sustained heavy‑duty applications still face battery life and power‑output limits. The analysis included site tours of…
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