top of page

Volvo CE and Rolls-Royce develop wood-burning charger for off-grid EVs

Jo Borrás

Jan 12, 2024

When work is being done off the grid in remote locations, it can be hard to keep construction equipment fueled up – regardless of whether that fuel is liquid or electric. But now, the new, first-of-its-kind BioCharger from Air Burners is about to make that job a whole lot easier.


There’s a saying in the construction business that goes, “you might be working for the power company, but that doesn’t mean you have power.” And when you’re tasked with clearing trees, blazing trails, and quite literally laying the foundations of infrastructure and energy grid expansion, there simply isn’t a place to plug in your electric equipment. Enter: the BioCharger.


A collaborative effort between Volvo CE, Rolls-Royce, and Air Burners, the BioCharger uses “air curtain technology” to burn wood and waste in a closed-loop system. The resulting heat is converted into electric energy and stored in a connected Battery Storage Module, or BSM. That energy can then be used to charge battery-electric vehicles, construction equipment, and portable power tools throughout the job site.


Especially when that job site is deep in the woods.


“While electric machinery becomes increasingly popular in the fight against climate change, when it comes to forest management, we must have practical solutions for charging electric machinery away from traditional power sources,” explains Brian O’Connor, president of Air Burners. “The Air Burners BioCharger provides that solution … in an economical and environmentally conscious way.”


To back up that claim, Air Burners points out that some seventy million tons of wood waste are collected annually in the US alone, but more than 50% of that waste is left to open burns or decomposition, which releases particulate matter and greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. In contrast, the company claims its “closed-loop system” significantly reduces harmful particulate matter and greenhouse gas emissions compared to open burns.

And, of course, it turns what would otherwise be “waste heat” into useful electricity. And it was Rolls-Royce (the power-production company, not the BMW-owned auto brand of the same name) that helped Air Burners develop the 450-kWh EV charging station within the BioCharger.


“The BioCharger is a unique application for our mtu EnergyPack battery energy storage system that I think shows just how versatile energy storage can be,” said Kevin McKinney, sales director at Rolls-Royce Solutions America. “The BioCharger’s ability to reduce emissions and generate energy through responsible handling of vegetative waste perfectly aligns with our targets to support our customers with innovative solutions for the transition to clean power generation.”


The BioCharger is currently in a pilot testing phase with a prototype of the 23-ton Volvo EC230 Crawler Electric Excavator ahead of that vehicle’s commercial launch later this year.

bottom of page