European freight data reveals that the continent's logistics heartbeat is not found on transcontinental routes, but in the dense industrial clusters of the so-called Blue Banana. This economic corridor, stretching from England through the Low Countries and the Rhine Valley into northern Italy, serves as the primary engine for diesel consumption. Because freight activity naturally clusters around major ports like Antwerp and Rotterdam, the infrastructure required for electrification is far more localized than critics suggest.
Rather than needing to solve the extreme challenge of a 2,500-kilometer haul, the transition relies on the high-density, shorter-distance trips that make up the majority of industry activity. Ports, logistics hubs, and industrial parks act as natural charging nodes, allowing for a phased transition where electric trucks replace diesel units on predictable, high-utilization routes. This mirrors the early adoption of electric passenger vehicles, where initial skepticism failed to account for the fact that most daily driving occurs well within battery capabilities. As these regional networks shift to electric power, a massive portion of Europe's diesel demand faces obsolescence, regardless of whether long-haul transcontinental trucking remains tethered to fossil fuels.

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