When you think of a rock ‘n’ roll tour, you probably picture mega lighting rigs, massive crews, huge stages and lots of heavy gear being hauled across the country. But what if that heavy haul could be done in a way that’s much kinder on the planet?
The Geordie Indie Pop Soft Rock legend’s recent People Watching Tour just proved you can tour sustainably with four Mercedes-Benz eActros 600 electric trucks handling all the transport between venues across the UK & Ireland.
Psssst… We’ll also reveal later in this blog another reason we Love Fender at the Generate Media office!
What made this tour a benchmark
Here are some of the standout bits that show how electric trucks are stepping up in live music:
- Full electric logistics: No diesel backup, just four eActros 600s moving stage sets and equipment across more than 900 miles, travelling England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
- Real CO₂ savings: The tour avoided about 840 kg CO₂ equivalent emissions over those 934 miles. To put that in perspective, that’s roughly what 33.6 mature trees absorb in a year.
- Strong performance & logistics planning: The eActros 600s have a >500 km range per charge, charge from 20 – 80% in about 25 minutes, and any longer charging stops (max about 90 minutes) fitted neatly into the tour schedule.
Why this matters for sustainable transport
This isn’t just a one-off novelty. It signals several positive shifts:
- Electric Heavy Goods Vehicles (eHGVs) are becoming viable for high-intensity, demanding use cases tight schedules, long distances, unpredictable timings.
- Existing charging infrastructure (in the UK & Ireland) is just about keeping up for long-haul electric needs though more deployment at venues and along tour routes will only help.
- When artists, logistics companies, manufacturers, and venue operators collaborate, sustainable touring can become a new standard, not just an exception.
Dad moment: Logistics + electricity + rock
As The Sustainable Dad, I love seeing electric transport used not just in everyday commuting or delivery vans, but in big, visible, high-impact settings like concert tours. It helps normalise the idea that everything moving on roads can (and maybe should) be electric sooner rather than later.
And, here’s why Sam Fender keeps on surprising us in the best possible way! Did you know that he donated his Brit Award to his local pub in Newcastle? We obviously needed to verify that fact so set our EVs sat nav to the Lowlights Pub in North Shields to check it out! Here’s the video evidence.
A few questions / takeaways for the future
- What more can be done to scale this up: for example, enable every major tour to use electric trucks?
- How can venues help: by installing high-power charge hubs to reduce charging downtime or uncertainty?
- What policy and funding changes are needed to accelerate electric HGV adoption in live events and in other heavy transport sectors?
If your favourite artist decided to tour with fully electric trucks and gear transport, would it make you more likely to buy a ticket (all else being equal)?
#SustainableTransport #eTrucks #EVLogistics #SamFender #ZeroEmissions #GreenTouring #TheSustainableDad




