Stagecoach rolls out 110 electric buses in Devon

Stagecoach Group has confirmed a £29.3 million investment to introduce 110 electric buses across Devon in south-west England. The rollout covers depots in Torbay, Barnstaple and Exeter and includes new charging infrastructure.

Stagecoach min
Image: Stagecoach

The deployment is being delivered in partnership with Devon County Council and Torbay Council and is supported by the UK Government’s Zero Emission Bus Regional Areas (ZEBRA) scheme. The programme will replace ageing diesel buses with zero-emission alternatives as part of Stagecoach’s wider decarbonisation strategy.

For Exeter, the addition of 30 electric buses marks a significant upgrade to the local fleet. In North Devon, Barnstaple will become a key hub for the new technology, hosting 21 vehicles at its depot. The remaining 59 units will be deployed in Torbay.

To support the electrification of the depots, Stagecoach has appointed e-fleet solutions provider VEV to design and install high-powered charging infrastructure. At Barnstaple, 11 dedicated chargers are being installed. The charging systems will be managed via a digital platform designed to monitor power demand in real time and optimise fleet availability.

Stagecoach recently made headlines because the electric buses it deployed in the region were too big for the narrow streets. In Torbay, for example, Park Road and Hartop Road feature narrow carriageways and on-street parking, leaving little room for larger vehicles to pass safely, which is why the company is looking into setting up alternative stops nearby.

torbayweekly.co.uk, themoorlander.co.uk

1 Comment

about „Stagecoach rolls out 110 electric buses in Devon“
Steph Clift
20.02.2026 um 11:35
If they are too wide to meet passengers needs especially given mainly used by older people and England's towns and villages are natorious for narrow roads and lanes is this really possible??

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