Coca-Cola's Canadian Fleet Tops 40 Volvo Electric Semis
Coca-Cola Canada has quietly expanded its electric truck fleet to more than forty Volvo VNR Electric semis. While Pepsi garners attention with its Tesla Semi partnership, Coca-Cola is making a steady, large-scale commitment to Volvo's electric heavy-duty trucks.

Coca-Cola's Canadian operations have crossed a significant milestone in commercial fleet electrification: the company now runs more than forty Volvo VNR Electric semi-trucks in its bright red livery. The expansion has happened largely under the radar, contrasting sharply with the media buzz surrounding rival Pepsi's high-profile Tesla Semi deployment.
The Volvo VNR Electric is a Class 8 battery-electric semi designed for regional distribution routes, offering a range of up to approximately 250 miles (400 km) on a single charge. It is powered by up to six battery packs and features Volvo's proven powertrain technology adapted for North American logistics operations.
The Coca-Cola–Volvo partnership underscores an important truth emerging in the commercial EV market: there is no single path to fleet decarbonization. While Tesla dominates consumer EV headlines, European manufacturers like Volvo are quietly winning significant contracts in the heavy-duty segment, particularly for companies prioritizing reliability and established service networks.
For the broader logistics and fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) industry, this fleet milestone sends a clear signal. With tightening emissions regulations in both the EU and North America — including the EPA's Phase 3 greenhouse gas rules — large operators are beginning to make electrification commitments at scale, and forty-plus trucks is no longer just a pilot program.
Source: Volvo electric semi scores another real-world win with Coca-Cola — Electrek· Based on source, with AI-assisted rewriting.
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