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2022 Arctic Road Rally


About the Arctic Road Rally

The Arctic Road Rally was an electric vehicle technology demonstration designed to help drive increased EV awareness, inspire adoption, and inform infrastructure development in Alaska. With 10 electric vehicles successfully completing the 1,096-mile drive from Fairbanks to Oliktok Point, the event illustrated the performance capabilities of electric vehicle technology in Alaska. The 2022 Arctic Road Rally was made possible with funding from the Department of Energy Office of Technology Transitions.


Frequently Asked Questions

  • The Arctic Road Rally is an electric vehicle technology demonstration to help drive increased EV awareness, inspire adoption, and inform infrastructure development in Alaska.

    The event is all about putting EV tech through its paces – demonstrating what it can do and also identifying any areas for improvement. We believe everyone should be able to access the long-term cost savings and other benefits provided by electric vehicles, so we need these cars and trucks to be able to handle anything. Technology demonstrations like this play an important role in getting to that point.

    The 2022 event took place along a 1,096-mile roundtrip route on the Dalton Highway between Fairbanks and Oliktok Point, Alaska, the northernmost drivable point in the U.S. More information about the 2023 Arctic Road Rally is coming soon.

  • The event is organized by Launch Alaska, funded by the Department of Energy’s Office of Technology Transitions. Generous sponsorships from more than a dozen Alaska companies supported the inaugural rally in 2022. Sponsors include Alaska Energy Authority, Alyeska Tire, Golden Valley Electric Association, ConocoPhillips Alaska, Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities, CIRI, Chugach Electric Association, Sandia National Laboratories, Seekins Ford-Lincoln, Alaska Joint Electrical Apprenticeship and Training Trust, Alaska Center for Energy and Power, Grizzl-E, Matanuska Electric Association, North Iron Engineering, and Elevated Oats.

    Arctic Road Rally participants come from across Alaska and beyond, all drawn by the opportunity to drive an electric vehicle to the northernmost point in the country.

  • Arctic Road Rally drivers charged their vehicles at temporary charging stations placed at multiple locations along the Dalton Highway, powered by locally-available power sources and installed with the support of both public and private partners.

  • Even when the electricity is generated by fossil fuels, electric vehicles produce significantly fewer emissions than traditional ICE vehicles in almost all situations — it’s also cheaper at the “pump.” And even when their electricity is generated by fossil fuels, EVs are poised to be powered by renewable sources as soon as those sources are ready (like they currently are in a growing number of cities around the country).

  • Yes! Eventually. It’s important to develop the technology to the point where even the most challenging drives can be done safely and reliably – which is why we did the 2022 Arctic Road Rally along the Dalton Highway in August. It’s a chance to demonstrate the electric vehicles’ strengths and identify any areas in need of improvement, setting the stage for tech innovation and future demonstrations and daily use in even the most difficult conditions (think -60° Fahrenheit and blowing snow). For many Alaska EV owners, the decreased battery capacity and range of their EVs in cold weather is already more than adequate for daily driving requirements, and many report better operation and comfort than traditional vehicles.

  • It’s all about preparing for the future and caring for our communities. Electric vehicles decrease emissions and increase driver savings: They’re cheaper to power and maintain than traditional internal combustion engine vehicles, and even when their electricity is generated by fossil fuels, they typically produce far fewer emissions than ICE cars and trucks.

    Plus, technological innovation means it will soon cost less to buy an electric vehicle than an ICE car or truck, and it’s important to build the charging station infrastructure we need to make those cost savings available to everyone who wants them.

    At the same time, we need to make the shift to renewable energy sources – sources that can provide the independence and climate sustainability necessary for our communities to truly thrive. Electric vehicle infrastructure can easily make the shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy. Gas stations can’t.


Press

Media coverage from the 2022 Arctic Road Rally.

Fairbanks Daily News Miner - Electric vehicle rally hits the Dalton Highway

Electric & Hybrid Vehicle Technology International - EVs take on 1,000-mile Arctic Road Rally challenge across Alaska to highlight charging infrastructure potential

KUAC / Alaska Public Media - Arctic Road Rally aims to show electric vehicles’ potential in Alaska

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September 27

2022 TrAKtion