IAA 2018: Bosch Announces Electric, Fuel-Cell Powertrains

The global automotive supplier introduced an electrified axle for semi-trailers, highlighted its investment in battery-electric and fuel-cell technology for commercial vehicles and outlined its vision for “hub-to-hub” autonomous trucks in the United States.
“The road freight of the future should ideally be as free of emissions, accidents and stress as possible. To achieve this, we have to increasingly electrify, automate and connect it,” Rolf Bulander, a Bosch board member and chairman of its mobility solutions business, said during the company’s IAA press conference on Sept. 19.
Moving forward, Bosch sees a variety of alternative powertrain options having a place in commercial trucks.
Bosch projected that by 2030, one out of every four new commercial vehicles worldwide will be electrically driven.
The supplier’s electrified trailer axle generates electricity during braking rather than simply rolling freely, then feeds that recaptured energy back into power units on the trailer. The most prominent use case is in refrigerated trailers, where this extra energy can be used to power the refrigeration unit, thus saving fuel.
The company said the electrified axle also could open the door for trailers to perform yard moves independently of the tractor.
The product could be retrofitted onto existing trailers, Bosch said.
The company also is developing battery-electric powertrain systems for medium-range trucks, as well as smaller vehicles used in final-mile delivery, including commercial vans and even cargo bikes.
For longhaul trucks, however, the batteries would be too heavy and too expensive, and the vehicle’s range would be too short, said Markus Heyn, a member of Bosch’s board of management.
To solve that problem, Bosch is pursuing fuel-cell technology.
A hydrogen tank for a fuel cell would weigh just a tenth as much as the batteries that would be needed to power a heavy-duty truck over long distances, Heyn said.
Bosch is developing fuel-cell powertrains in partnership with Nikola Motor Co., a U.S.-based startup that plans to introduce hydrogen-electric trucks in the coming years, as well as a network of hydrogen fueling stations to support them.
As the company invests in alternative power, it also continues to further refine today’s diesel technology. In 2025, 80-90% of all trucks still will be powered by diesel, Heyn said.
Self-driving technology is another centerpiece of Bosch’s technology development plans.
Heyn described driver-assistance systems as a “stepping stone on the road to automation.”
Bosch’s electronically controlled steering systems, for example, can enable automated lane-keeping functions that help prevent accidents.
“As we move toward automated driving over the next five years, demand for smart steering systems in heavy trucks will double annually,” Heyn said.
Bosch also envisions a role for self-driving trucks in “hub-to-hub” operations, and initially is focusing those efforts on the U.S. market.
“In the United States, Bosch sees huge potential for automation in trucks,” Bulander said. “It is there that the lack of truckers is greatest, and there that every tenth truck sticks to the same highway routes.”
The company envisions unmanned trucks that travel continuously back and forth among two or three logistics depots, he said.
This approach would save labor costs, increase transportation efficiency and shorten the payback time for the technology, he said.
Bosch also has been developing systems to support truck platooning, in which two or more trucks travel in each other’s slipstream to improve aerodynamics and reduce fuel consumption.
Bosch said it generates a quarter of its revenue from its technology for commercial vehicles, ranging from vans to heavy-duty trucks. The company said it expects its business for trucks and off-highway vehicles to grow 7-8% this year, driven in large part by its powertrain products. (www.chinatrucks.com)
Views:0
Submit Your Requirements, We Are Always At Your Service.
- Bosch and JMC Form New Joint Venture for LCV Electric Drive Systems 2024-10-28
- Weichai and Bosch Join Forces for Future Technological Innovation 2023-11-07
- Auto Shanghai: Bosch Presents Innovations for Electrification and Automation 2023-04-18
- New Area of Business: Bosch to Develop Components for Hydrogen Electrolysis 2022-05-06
- BOSCH Qingling Hydrogen Fuel Cell Project Officially Kicks off in Chongqing 2021-12-29
- Qingling-Bosch Hydrogen-powered Truck Completes Its First Trial Operation 2021-10-13
- FAW Jiefang , Bosch Reach Agreement in Offering FOTA 2019-05-20
- Weichai Power Joins Hands with Bosch in Developing Fuel Cells 2017-11-24
- Bosch Plans to Build Asia Pacific’s First iBooster Plant in Nanjing, China 2017-08-02
- Bosch to Sell Starters, Generators Unit to China Partner ZMJ 2017-05-05
- Foton, COSCO Shipping Move to Secure Capacity as China’s CV Exports Rise
- The 11th DISCOVERY TRUST Awards Successfully Held in Beijing, China
- Chinese Heavy Truck Makers Shift to Value-Driven Global Expansion
- Shandong Heavy Industry and Kazakhstan’s Karaganda Region Ink New Deal
- China’s Diesel Trucks are Shifting to Electric
- Indonesia’s State-led Firm Set to Purchase 320,000 Vehicles
- SANY Truck and Pony.ai to Mass-Produce Gen-4 Autonomous Trucks in 2026
- FOTON Boosts Local Manufacturing in South Africa
- Office Closure for National Day Holiday
- FORLAND Rolls Out Its 6.8 Millionth Vehicle
- China Heavy Truck Sales Fall to 73,600 Units in February
- China’s Medium-Duty Truck Sales Fall to 8,125 Units in February, 2026
- China’s February Light Truck Sales Fall 23% to 117,200 Units
- China’s Mini Truck Sales Rise 15% in February to 41,500 Units
- China’s Light Truck Market Rises 8% in January 2026 to 323,500 units
- China’s Pickup Sales Reach Five-Year January High as Market Momentum Builds
- Heavy Truck Sales Soar 46% to 105,400 Units in January 2026
- January Medium Truck Sales Hit 14,100, Up 33%
- China’s Truck Exports Top 1 Million Units for the First Time in 2025
- China Tractor Truck Sales Up 54% in Dec., 2025 Full-Year Sales 460,000 Units

