http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/will-pge-get-approval-for-its-ev-charging-pilot
Will PG&E Finally Get Approval for Its EV Charging Pilot?
March 30, 2016  Jeff St. John

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The utility’s new plan will cost less for ratepayers. But EV charging
companies are still worried about utility control.

Pacific Gas & Electric has struggled to put together an electric-vehicle
charging plan that can get approval. Its last plan was rejected by
California state regulators in September, largely because it asked for far
more money, and more utility ownership of EV charging assets, than did its
fellow investor-owned utilities in Southern California.

Last week, PG&E took a step toward closing the EV charging deal, with its
Charge Smart and Save plan. The Northern California utility has scaled down
its new plan, asking for $160 million for 7,500 charging stations, compared
to last year’s request for $654 million to build 25,000 chargers.

Like its fellow IOUs, PG&E plans to install many of its chargers at
multi-unit dwellings and workplaces, which are more challenging for
private-sector EV charging economics. PG&E has also committed to deploying
at least 15 percent of its charging stations in disadvantaged communities,
and to keep the rate increases to pay for it to less than $2.75 per year for
a typical residential customer.

These changes have earned PG&E’s new plan the support of various
environmental and consumer groups in the form of a settlement agreement
similar to those obtained by SDG&E and SCE. That agreement could give PG&E’s
new plan additional weight with the California PUC.

The new agreement has been approved by energy policy groups, including the
Center for Sustainable Energy, the Sierra Club, The Greenlining Institute,
the Natural Resources Defense Council, EV charging startup Greenlots, EV
promotional group Plug In America, automakers General Motors and Honda, and
community choice aggregation entities including Marin Clean Energy and the
Sonoma Clean Power Authority.

Not all parties are pleased with PG&E’s plan, however. In particular, the
Electric Vehicle Charging Association (EVCA), a group including ChargePoint,
EV Connect, NRG Energy’s eVgo and ABM that has signed off on SDG&E and SCE’s
plans, said in a release last week that PG&E’s plan will “cost ratepayers,
inhibit innovation, and limit customer choice.”

EVCA’s main complaints center around the level of control PG&E is seeking
over which type of charging equipment is used, which companies can be
involved in operating the units, and how their services will be priced.

“The proposal leaves open significant unanswered questions about the program
design, including responsibility for network management, the ability of site
hosts to implement innovative pricing models, the ability of PG&E to pick
winners and losers in the market, and impacts to a competitive marketplace,”
wrote the group.

Like those of its Southern California counterparts, PG&E’s new plan opens up
the option for site hosts to choose the charging technology for the 75,000
level 2 chargers it hopes to deploy, even though the utility is seeking to
own the charging equipment itself.

But PG&E also plans to impose an annual vendor selection process for
would-be participants, compared to the quarterly openings provided by
SDG&E’s plan. “That stifles innovation,” Damon Conklin, EVCA spokesperson,
said in a recent interview. “No startup is going to want to enter a market
where there’s an annual prescreening.”

What’s more, the 100 DC fast-charging systems that PG&E wants to install
will be selected in a single-vendor process, and will come with significant
restrictions on the pricing of power they use, he said. That might set up
the utility as a direct competitor to the fast-charging networks being
deployed by companies like Tesla, eVgo and Nissan, he noted. 

EVCA also complains that PG&E’s proposal for 7,500 chargers -- nearly three
times the number the CPUC advised the utility to ask for in guidance last
year -- comes at a cost per EV charging port of about $21,000.
Private-sector systems cost $8,000 on average.

That could expose the utility’s ratepayers to covering those costs,
something that has caused ratepayer groups including The Utility Reform
Network and CPUC’s Office of Ratepayer Advocates to withhold their support
of PG&E’s plan.
[© greentechmedia.com]




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