Echelon utilization of retired electric bus batteries: Economic and environmental potential
Journal article, 2026

The rapid deployment of electric bus fleets introduces dual pressures on grid stability and sustainable battery retirement. Harnessing the residual capacity of retired batteries through echelon utilization presents a strategic pathway toward circular economy and carbon neutrality. This study presents an integrated multi-model framework combining vehicle behavior simulation, battery degradation modeling, retirement flow forecasting, and benefits analysis to evaluate the echelon utilization potential and economic-environmental benefits of deploying electric bus second-life batteries (EBSLBs) in energy storage scenarios. A case study of Wenzhou, China, demonstrates that over 1.9 GWh of EBSLBs capacity will become available annually by 2035. Leveraging these energy storage resources to store curtailed renewable energy and manage peak power loads can reduce per capita carbon emissions from urban residential electricity consumption by 10%, and generate annual economic revenues exceeding ¥600 million, thus enhancing urban energy resilience and supporting low-carbon development.

Electric bus

Environmental benefits

Retired batteries

Echelon utilization

Energy storage systems

Techno-economic assessment

Author

Wenzhu Xu

Zhejiang University

Wentong Guo

Zhejiang University

Kun Gao

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Geology and Geotechnics

Chengcheng Yang

Tsinghua University

Yidan Shangguan

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Yexing Yin

Zhejiang University

Wenbin Yao

Zhejiang Sci-Tech University

Sheng Jin

Zhejiang University

Zhejiang University of Science and Technology

Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review

1366-5545 (ISSN)

Vol. 209 104778

Electric Multimodal Transport Systems for Enhancing Urban Accessibility and Connectivity (eMATS)

Swedish Energy Agency (2023-00029), 2023-05-05 -- 2026-04-30.

European Commission (EC), 2023-01-01 -- 2025-12-31.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Other Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

Energy Systems

DOI

10.1016/j.tre.2026.104778

More information

Latest update

4/18/2026