What are the Top Fleet Electrification Companies?

Fleet electrification is a broad industry which affects delivery companies, leasing, daily car rentals and heavy trucking.
Globally, 116 million EVs cars, buses, vans and heavy trucks are forecast to be on the road in 2026, according to Gartner. As countries worldwide continue to adapt and regulate for electrification, companies supplying, operating and installing infrastructure for fleet vehicles are already adapting and offering innovative fleet solutions.
EV Magazine has explored some of the top companies involved in electrifying fleets, from offering leases to owning delivery vehicles.
Amazon
CEO: Andy Jassy
Headquarters: Washington, US
Amazon began rolling out its electric delivery vans in the summer of 2022 and now has more than 30,000 across the US. Amazon also partnered with Mercedes-Benz to bring 5,000 electric vans into its network in Europe.
The company has a partnership with Rivian to bring 100,000 electric delivery vehicles on the road by 2030.
Andy Jassy, Amazon CEO, said when announcing the partnership: “Fighting the effects of climate change requires constant innovation and action, and Amazon is partnering with companies who share our passion for inventing new ways to minimise our impact on the environment.
“Rivian has been an excellent partner in that mission, and we’re excited to see our first custom electric delivery vehicles on the road.”
Ryder System
CEO: John J. Diez
Headquarters: Florida, US
Ryder System is a US based truck company that specialises in leasing, supply chain and fleet management solutions. It offers light and heavy duty electric commercial vehicles.
In 2023, Ryder announced RyderElectric+, an all in one service for fleet electrification providing electrification advisors, vehicles, charging, telematics and maintenance. In the same year Ryder announced its plan to introduce 4,000 BrightDrop Zevo 600 and Zevo 400 electric vans to its lease and rental fleet.
Carlo Rodriguez, Group Director for Advanced Vehicle Technology at Ryder, said: “As demand and adoption of commercial EVs continues to accelerate across the transportation and logistics industries, this latest offering provides Ryder customers with an end-to-end solution for zero-emission commercial fleet management, deployment, fuelling and maintenance.”
Siemens
CEO: Roland Busch
Headquarters: Munich
Siemens offer EV charging equipment and services under Siemens eMobility. It has also committed to electrifying its own fleet.
In March 2023, the United States Postal Service selected Siemens eMobility as an EV charging infrastructure provider for its fleet electrification efforts.
Siemens has set ambitious goals for the electrification of its own fleet within the framework of its sustainability strategy. The company aims to make the entire fleet CO₂-neutral and fully electric by 2030.
Stefan Kurz, Head of Global Fleet Management at Siemens, said: "The electrification of our fleet is a clear commitment to achieving our climate goals.
"But we also want to be a pioneer in our industry and send a clear signal for sustainable fleet management in line with our DEGREE framework.”
SF Express
CEO: Wang Wei
Headquarters: Shenzhen, China
With an EV fleet of over 40,000 vehicles, this Chinese company is a strong performing EV fleet company by numbers. SF Express has steadily expanded the scale of its green fleet by adopting various methods, such as self-purchase and leasing, and is gradually replacing ICE vehicles.
In 2024, the company added nearly 9,000 new energy vehicles into its green fleet operations, which cover 253 cities.
SF Express is also committed to low carbon transportation. In 2024, SF claims it has reduced 479,327 tons of GHG emissions through promoting low carbon transportation.
As of the end of 2024, the company has successfully advanced the construction of 35 photovoltaic (PV) projects, that convert sunlight into electricity. Among them, 24 PV projects have been put into operation, with the total installed capacity of the equipment reaching 111 megawatts.
BP Pulse
CEO: Meg O’Neil
Headquarters: London, UK
A subsidiary of BP, BP Pulse currently offers 22,000 EV charge points worldwide and aims for more than 100,000 globally by 2030, around 90% rapid or ultra-fast.
As well as charging solutions BP pulse also offer business solutions including fleet expert consultations.
In the US, BP Pulse announced plans to invest US$1bn in EV charging across US by 2030 to bring fast charging charging to Hertz’s locations in major cities such as Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Miami, New York City, Orlando, Phoenix, San Francisco and Washington, DC.
In the UK, BP Pulse and Moto have collaborated to bring New megawatt charging system (MCS) technology to be installed across key UK motorway corridors in 2025.




