Really?! Thats crap, how do the manufacturers get away with saying theyve got 150km range?! Its absurd!
.. my advice might be contrary to some you have already been given. The Motus is a lovely bike, i have one and am very pleased with it. It may not be optimal for your needs. I see it as better as a suburban or country road type bike, rather than for the city. A bike with smaller wheels is better for inner city use and maybe even a folder which would be easy to get into the van. Small wheels allow faster acceleration and braking and are more manouverable .
There are problems with folders as the geometry is not optimised, so a non folding smaller wheeled bike.
In reference to your complaint about distances and batterys...
There is a huge amount of fantasy about ebike ranges. It takes a certain amount of energy to propel a body up to 15 miles per hour, and whenever the bike brakes to stop all that energy is lost. There is no efficient method of recovering that kinetic energy. If a bike goes up a hill then it requires additional energy, which may or may not be recovered when it comes down the next hill. The tyre pressure contributes to energy loss ... High pressure being better efficiency. Wind and air resistance and rider stance are all major contributors to energy loss. Power loss goes up as the cube of the wind speed. So a bike travelling at 10 miles per hour will consume 8 times more energy than one travelling at 5 miles per hour , in still air...
So a lightweight person travelling slowly on level ground in a aerodynamic like stance , without stopping or starting could easily achieve the published target,
On a legal bike and if they got up to a speed of 27km hr they could cycle indefinitely without consuming battery power!