http://phys.org/news/2015-10-electric-vehicle-habits-revealed.html
Electric vehicle charging habits revealed
October 1, 2015

[image] Tesla P85D
This week, Idaho National Laboratory is reporting analysis results from the
largest collection of light-duty plug-in electric vehicle (PEV) and charging
infrastructure demonstrations in the world. The findings will be used to
support and refine activities of the U.S. Department of Energy's EV
Everywhere Grand Challenge.

The key finding was that public charging infrastructure is not needed
everywhere to enable PEV adoption. Instead, charging infrastructure should
be focused at homes, workplaces and public "hot spots" that serve multiple
venues. When charged by drivers, battery electric and plug-in hybrid
electric vehicles achieve significant petroleum reductions while meeting the
public's everyday driving needs.

Widespread adoption of PEVs has the potential to significantly reduce our
nation's transportation petroleum consumption and greenhouse gas emissions.
A commonly cited barrier to adoption is the lack of public places for PEV
drivers to plug in their vehicles. To reduce this barrier, critical
questions must first be answered: How many and what kind of charging
stations are needed? Where and how often do PEV drivers charge? How many
electric vehicle miles are traveled and what level of petroleum reduction
can be achieved?

In 2009, DOE set out to answer these critical questions. Several resulting
projects - Charge Point America project, Chrysler Ram PEV Demonstration,
General Motors Volt Demonstration, South Coast Air Quality Management
District/Via Motors PHEV Demonstration, and The EV Project - installed
roughly 17,000 charging stations and deployed approximately 8,700 PEVs
across the U.S. The DOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
provided half the funding for the five projects, and INL researchers
collected and analyzed the resulting data.

Data collected from all five projects captured nearly 130 million miles of
driving and 6 million charging events, providing the most comprehensive view
of PEV and charging usage to date.

The findings are summarized in a report delivered to DOE this week.

The analysis revealed that PEV private owners performed an average of more
than 85 percent of charging at home. When away from home, they tended to
favor just a few public charging stations, with workplace stations being
most popular and less expensive to install. Factors that drive popularity of
public charging locations are community-specific.

The study also found that drivers adjust their charging habits based on
conditions such as fees and rules for use. When privately owned Volts are
charged frequently, they achieved better than 120 mpg in normal consumer use
patterns. Also, workplace charging was found to enable significant electric
range extension. Project participants with access to charging at work were
observed to drive 25 percent more on electricity alone than the overall
group of vehicles in the project.
[© phys.org]
...
http://avt.inel.gov/summaryreport.shtml
Executive Summary and the full report



http://www.greencarcongress.com/2015/10/20151001-inl.html
INL analysis of 5 large-scale PEV and charging projects finds public
charging infrastructure not needed everywhere to enable PEV adoption
1 October 2015

Idaho National Laboratory has released the voluminous findings from its
analysis of five large-scale PEV and charging infrastructure projects funded
by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Collectively, these projects
represent the largest-ever deployment, data collection and analysis, and
reporting of PEV and charging infrastructure petroleum reduction benefits.
The results will be used to support and refine activities of the US
Department of Energy’s EV Everywhere Grand Challenge.

The key finding of INL’s assessment of the results was that public charging
infrastructure is not needed everywhere to enable PEV adoption. Instead, the
results suggest that charging infrastructure should be focused at homes,
workplaces and public “hot spots” that serve multiple venues.

The five projects and technologies researched were:

    ChargePoint America: charging infrastructure
    Chevrolet Volts: extended range electric vehicles (EREVs)
    Chrysler Ram Pickup: plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs)
    The EV Project: charging infrastructure, Nissan Leaf [EVs], Chevrolet
Volt [pih] and Car2Go Smart EVs

    SCAQMD/EPRI/Via Motors: PHEV vans and pickups

Combined, ChargePoint America and The EV Project alone formed the largest
PEV infrastructure demonstration in the world. Between 1 Jan. 2011, and 31
Dec. 2013, this combined project installed nearly 17,000 alternating current
(AC) Level 2 charging stations for residential and commercial use and more
than 100 dual-port direct current (DC) fast chargers in 22 regions across
the United States.

More than 8,000 privately owned Nissan Leafs and Chevrolet Volts and more
than 300 Smart ForTwo Electric Drive vehicles in Car2Go car-sharing fleets
were enrolled in the project.

A commonly cited barrier to PEV adoption is the lack of public places for
PEV drivers to plug in their vehicles. To reduce this barrier, DOE set out
to answer a set of critical questions: How many and what kind of charging
stations are needed? Where and how often do PEV drivers charge? How many
electric vehicle miles are traveled and what level of petroleum reduction
can be achieved?

Beginning in 2009, several resulting projects—Charge Point America project,
Chrysler Ram PEV Demonstration, General Motors Volt Demonstration, South
Coast Air Quality Management District/Via Motors PHEV Demonstration, and The
EV Project—installed roughly 17,000 charging stations and deployed
approximately 8,700 PEVs across the US. The DOE Office of Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy provided half the funding for the five projects, and
INL researchers collected and analyzed the resulting data.

Data collected from all five projects captured nearly 130 million miles of
driving and 6 million charging events, providing the most comprehensive view
of PEV and charging usage to date.

INL found that PEV private owners performed an average of more than 85% of
charging at home. About half the project participants charged at home almost
exclusively. Of those who charged away from home, the vast majority favored
three or fewer away-from-home charging locations, and one or more of these
locations was at work for some drivers.

    This is not to say that public charging stations are not necessary or
desirable. Many DC fast chargers (all of which were accessible to the
public) experienced heavy use to support both in-town and inter-city
driving. Also, a relatively small number of public AC Level 2 public
charging sites saw consistently high use. This begs the question: what is it
about the small number of highly used charging sites that led to their
popularity? 

    There was some correlation between public charging location
characteristics and utilization. Public Level 2 charging stations installed
in locations where vehicles were typically parked for longer periods of time
often were, in fact, among those most often used. These locations included
shopping malls, airports and commuter lots, and downtown parking lots or
garages with easy access to a variety of venues.
    —INL report

The study also found that drivers adjust their charging habits based on
conditions such as fees and rules for use. When privately owned Volts are
charged frequently, they achieved better than 120 mpg in normal consumer use
patterns. Also, workplace charging was found to enable significant electric
range extension. Project participants with access to charging at work were
observed to drive 25% more on electricity alone than the overall group of
vehicles in the project.

The project also illuminated other aspects of PEV use.

    Public and workplace charging infra-structure enabled drivers to
increase their electric driving range.

    Drivers of the Chevrolet Volt, an extended-range electric vehicle,
tended to charge more frequently and to more fully deplete their vehicle’s
battery than drivers of the Nissan LEAF BEV. This allowed the overall group
of Volts studied to average only 6% fewer electric vehicle (EV) mode miles
traveled as the LEAFs in the project, despite the LEAF’s much larger battery
pack.

    INL suggested two reasons for this: first, Volt drivers tend to deplete
their batteries fully, while LEAF drivers favored recharging with
significant charge resident in their batteries. Second, Volt drivers plugged
in more oftern than LEAF drivers.

    There are opportunities to use pricing structures and other policies to
manage demand for PEV charging, both in terms of charging station
through-put at charging hot spots and electricity demand on the electric
grid.
[© greencarcongress.com]




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use:
http://evdl.org/evln/


{brucedp.150m.com}

--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Driver-s-charging-habits-revealed-home-work-public-hot-spots-tp4677864.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to