'The vision is to build an EVSE network along Highway 1 and 101 in CA'

https://www.nrdc.org/experts/luke-tonachel/new-york-state-enacts-electric-vehicle-consumer-rebate-program
New York State Enacts Electric Vehicle Consumer Rebate Program
April 01, 2016    Luke Tonachel

Kudos go out today to New York’s Governor Andrew Cuomo and the state’s
legislators for incorporating consumer rebates toward the purchase of new
electric vehicles (EVs) into the state’s annual budget for the first time.
These rebates, which will offer buyers as much as $2,000 for a battery-only
electric vehicle, a plug-in hybrid, or a fuel-cell EV, will help New York
drivers kick our addiction to polluting petroleum fuels. Importantly,
they’ll help us meet New York’s ambitious and scientifically-mandated
climate goals: cutting economy-wide greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent
by 2030 and 80 percent by 2050. Given that transportation-related emissions
account for more than one-third of New York’s greenhouse gas pollution,
these incentives can put us on the right path toward cleaner air, a more
stable climate, and a much-needed transition to cleaner vehicles.

The benefits don’t stop there, either. By boosting EV use in the Empire
State, these incentives can help keep our energy dollars here in New York,
rather than sending them out of state and out of the country, where we now
spend a full $20 billion to import gasoline and diesel fuel every year. In
other words, these incentives won’t just benefit would-be EV drivers. By
keeping our energy dollars local, they’ll help New York’s economy and New
Yorkers overall.

Let’s get back to the climate benefits, though. Already, an EV charged on
the New York electric grid is a win for the climate when compared to a
conventional vehicle. In fact, NRDC’s research with the Electric Power
Research Institute shows that a New York-charged electric car has the
emissions equivalent of gasoline vehicle that gets over 120 miles per
gallon. And that’s given the current electric mix. As New York progresses
toward its 50-percent-by-2030 clean electricity target, a goal now being
enacted by the New York State Public Service Commission, and gets more and
more of its electricity from pollution-free sources such as wind and solar
power, pollution from these vehicles will decrease further.

Cutting transportation-related carbon and other air pollution is a
significant challenge and one that New York’s state government has already
taken up as part of a coalition that includes California and Oregon on the
West Coast, and Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and
Vermont here on the East Coast. Together, in 2013, they pledged to get 3.3
million zero emissions vehicles (ZEVs) on the road by 2025.

Now, for the first time, New York is really putting its money where its
mouth is, offering as much as $2,000 to purchasers of new EVs, plug-in
hybrids ... In doing so, it joins other Northeast and Mid-Atlantic
pioneering states including Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, and Rhode
Island in promoting cleaner transportation options for drivers through EV
rebates. (The federal government also offers an EV tax credit that’s worth
as much as $7,500 per vehicle.)

These incentives aren’t giveaways to buyers. Rather, as we’ve seen with
government incentives for wind and solar power, they’re tools to spur demand
and thereby speed economies of scale. In turn, they drive both investments
in new technologies and competition in the market place, which lowers prices
for everyone. Progress is being made and the EV future is bright. Already,
EV battery prices are dropping fast, and new vehicles with mainstream
prices—both EVs and plug-in hybrids with extended ranges—are being delivered
to dealers’ showrooms and sales are up. Despite really low gas prices, EV
sales in the first two months of 2016 were up 9 percent over the same period
last year.

There’s still much work to be done to move New Yorkers off of gasoline and
diesel and on to EVs powered by increasingly cleaner energy. Just as
incentives can boost sales, so, too, can the deployment of publicly
available charging stations. In the past seven years, New York has gone from
fewer than a dozen public stations to more than 1,200. By committing to
increase that number, as California and its utilities recently have, New
York can further smooth this essential transition away from polluting fuels.

Let’s savor this important milestone. By supporting consumer EV rebates, New
York is solidifying its leadership in clean transportation and moving us an
important step closer to a more stable climate and cleaner air for all.
[©  Natural Resources Defense Council 2016]



http://www.jamestownpress.com/news/2016-03-31/News/State_offers_2500_rebate_incentive_on_purchase_lea.html
State offers $2,500 rebate incentive on purchase, lease of electric vehicle
Mar 30, 2016  The state of Rhode Island recently announced a $200,000
incentive program for residents who purchase or lease a new electric vehicle
from a licensed Rhode Island franchised automobile dealer ...
...
http://www.montereycountyweekly.com/news/local_news/new-law-will-help-improve-electric-vehicle-charging-infrastructure/article_648c02ce-f6ba-11e5-afd8-ab6c12d0567c.html
New law will help improve electric vehicle charging infrastructure.
Mar 31, 2016 ... The district’s vision, Romero says, is to build a network
that fills in all the gaps along the major corridors like Highway 1 and
Highway 101 ...




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