Skip to main content

LiuGong is committed to alternative power

April 8, 2025 Read time: 3 mins
The battery-electric 4280DE motor grader’s battery pack provides fast charging within 1.6 hours

LiuGong’s commitment towards the future of battery-electric vehicles in the construction sector is exemplified by its expanded portfolio, including the new 4280DE motor grader.

The battery-electric grader’s battery pack provides fast charging within 1.6 hours and allows normal working conditions between six to 10 hours.

Meanwhile, the large capacity lithium-iron phosphate battery is safe and durable. Its development also demonstrates how new technologies and imagination go hand in hand in today’s R&D, as explained by the company’s chairman, Zeng Guang’an.

Zeng joined LiuGong when he was a 20-year-old university graduate and now has 40 years with the company. During an interview with Global Highways, he noted that innovation requires a great deal of imagination when it comes to technical development because of the incredible tools that are now available, including artificial intelligence.

For example, when the Chinese government took concrete steps to support electric-vehicle development back in 2014, he understood that this could also be done for LiuGong’s machinery.

“You need imagination, dedication but also you need to invest in your ideas. This is most important for the long-term success of new technologies,” he said.

Unlike 20 years ago, digitalisation is increasingly part of the solution for maintaining good dealership relations that includes fast product and service delivery for the end user of LiuGong’s equipment.

“It is easier now to get information from customers thanks to sensors on a machine that tell of its performance in real time,” said Zeng. “We can respond quickly and pinpoint problems for the end user. This speeds up servicing for machines and can improve delivery of parts, too.”

The end user and dealers are always in the forefront of the minds of employees in LiuGong’s global regional hubs. In today’s business environment, increased speed of servicing and parts delivery are part of the many challenges for Liugong’s global dealership network.

“For example, in Europe there are the European Union regulations governing BEVs [battery-electric vehicles] and we have to train our dealers, service dealers and customers to be up to date with the regulations,” he said. “We must invest in this.”

Today’s business environment also now includes the recent global tariff hikes and concerns by almost all sectors of the impact this will have on international supply chains. Nonetheless, Zeng is optimistic about the future of global trade. He is also adamant that LiuGong, which has had customers in the US for more than 50 years, will stay in the US to support them, no matter what.

“Every four years they have a new president. You may lose some revenue in the short term but you have to stay there to support your customers in order for everyone to succeed in the long term.” 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The Lessons of the Genoa bridge collapse
    April 23, 2019
    The partial collapse of the Polcevera viaduct, better known as the Morandi Bridge, has prompted debate regarding the technical and administrative aspects of maintaining road infrastructures. We discussed it with the engineer Gabriele Camomilla, former Director of Research and Maintenance of the Società Autostrade, who coordinated the only major structural intervention performed on the bridge, carried out in the early 1990s
  • MIRA builds on reputation for transport excellence
    October 3, 2012
    MIRA in central England has begun a huge redevelopment of its 830 acre site that will see the renowned centre for transport technologies expand its capabilities while, at the same time, create the largest transport research and development technology park in Europe. Guy Woodford reports This is all very impressive,” said Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg in April 2011 on hearing a presentation of MIRA’s ambitious expansion plans. As succinct appraisals go, Clegg’s view of MIRA’s plans to develop its brand of
  • Volvo CE is further developing its presence in road construction
    October 3, 2014
    The road business has benefited from fairly constant levels of trading in recent years and even during the downturn, construction operations only fell by a comparatively small quantity during the downturn. Darren Fitch, director for road machinery for the EMEA region within Volvo CE said, “The road construction sector has been far less cyclical than other construction markets.” The global market for road machinery is healthy at present and he said, “We’re having a good year.”
  • Why the future of compact equipment is electric
    October 16, 2020
    Case CE, Hitachi, JCB and Wacker Neuson are amongst the equipment manufacturers convinced of the potential for electric construction machines