Rollin' With the Polar Bears

The first EV Tundra Buggy is tackling its treacherous new landscape

Frontiers North Adventures' Tundra Buggy is here.

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Originally Published: 
The first EV Tundra Buggy parked on the snow

The EV Tundra Buggy has hit the road — so to speak.

On November 20, Canadian tourism firm Frontiers North Adventures unveiled what it claims to be the first electric vehicle Tundra Buggy. The machine, a retrofitted version of one of its existing buggies, will be used to take tourists around the subarctic tundra in the Churchill Wildlife Management Area at the far north of Canada to see polar bears up close.

Getting ready for a Buggy trip.

Grant Faint/Photodisc/Getty Images

Electrifying the whole world

The vehicle is emblematic of how electrification is spreading. Global plug-in vehicle sales reached a record 721,000 registrations in November 2021 alone, nearly doubling year-over-year. Battery prices have also dropped: BloombergNEF research shows that the cost of a lithium-ion battery in 2010 was $1,100 per kilowatt-hour. By 2020, that figure had dropped to just $137.

The prevalence of battery technology has encouraged new projects like electric semi-trucks, snow bikes, boats, and more.

With the EV Tundra Buggy, clean energy will power more imaginative trips than ever before, getting up close with polar bears in the subarctic tundra. It could also aid scientific research thanks to the company’s 22-year partnership with Polar Bears International.

Want to know more about how the Tundra Buggy actually works, how it handles ice, and its complicated journey to “clean” driving despite not being zero-emission? Read the full interview with Jessica Burtnick, manager of marketing and communications for Frontiers North Adventures, only in MUSK READS+.

Polar buggy love

“When a polar bear walks up to the Tundra Buggy, stands up, and puts its paws on the side…we call that buggy love,” Jessica Burtnick, manager of marketing and communications for Frontiers, tells Inverse.

The new vehicles could help protect the home of these majestic bears.

“These are ecosystems we care about, and that we want to be able to preserve for future generations,” she says.

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