https://earthjustice.org/blog/2019-april/want-people-to-drive-electric-give-them-workplace-chargers
Want People to Drive Electric? Give Them Workplace Chargers
April 22, 2019  Sara Gersen

[image  / Sara Gersen / Earthjustice
https://earthjustice.org/sites/default/files/styles/image_800x600/public/evcharging.png
Electric car drivers Stephanie Tiffany, Shanying Cui, and Ari Weinstein
(from left to right) purchased their vehicles after their workplace
installed charging stations
]

The California Public Utilities Commission should approve a proposal to
deploy more charging infrastructure at workplaces, apartment buildings, and
public places.

A growing number of Californians are driving electric cars because their
workplaces have electric vehicle charging infrastructure.

When I was in the market for a new car two years ago, I was committed to
buying an electric vehicle because I work every day as an attorney with
Earthjustice’s Right to Zero campaign to fight pollution from vehicles and
energy generation. But environmental concerns wouldn’t be enough to convince
my husband, Joe, how we should make our family’s biggest-ever investment.
Plus, as renters, our ability to charge an electric car at home is a bit
precarious.

Luckily, I was able to get Joe comfortable purchasing our Chevrolet Volt
[pih] because he works at a company that just installed vehicle chargers
through a Southern California Edison pilot program.

We’re not alone—commuters with access to workplace chargers are six times
more likely to drive electric vehicles, according to the U.S. Department of
Energy.

The California Public Utilities Commission is now considering a proposal
from Southern California Edison to deploy more charging infrastructure at
workplaces, apartment buildings, and public places. Edison’s proposed
additional investments could encourage more Californians to choose an
electrified ride.

Joe works at HRL Laboratories, where 46 of the company’s 540 employees are
now driving electric. To understand why so many HRL employees are taking
advantage of EV chargers and glean lessons for other employers and
policymakers, I interviewed three electric car drivers.

The Number Cruncher: Shanying 

Shanying Cui is a research scientist at HRL whose decision to drive an
electric car was primarily economic. But Shanying never would have done the
math to discover how much money she could save on fuel and maintenance if it
hadn’t been for HRL’s charging stations. “Seeing other people charging in
the parking lot is what made me realize an electric car was a possibility
for me,” Shanying explained. Her experience leasing a Volt has been so
positive that she says, “I tell everyone how great EVs are, how much money
you can save, and how convenient it is to never go to a gas station.”
Shanying recently sat down with a colleague to show him how to calculate how
much he could save on fuel with an electric vehicle. Now that the lease is
ending on Shanying’s Volt, she intends to purchase an all-electric model.

The Super Commuter: Stephanie 

Stephanie Tiffany, HRL’s senior librarian, bought her first electric vehicle
in 2013, shortly after HRL installed its first chargers. She wanted to buy a
plug-in hybrid for environmental reasons, but says HRL’s chargers are the
reason she pulled the trigger on purchasing a Ford C-Max. Stephanie’s drive
to work is 42 miles—farther than the car’s electric range. Charging at work
was key because it doubled the number of miles she could drive on
electricity. With Stephanie’s encouragement, a colleague in her carpool
followed her lead and bought a C-Max too. Now, Stephanie is in the market to
purchase her first all-electric car.

The Renter: Ari

Ari Weinstein, another HRL research scientist, says that “having dependable
charging at work let me buy a plug-in hybrid car without hesitating.” To
charge at the home Ari rents, he would need to negotiate a payment system
with his landlord, and run a slow charging cord through a window. Ari wanted
to buy an electric vehicle to reduce his carbon footprint, take advantage of
lower repair costs and federal incentives, and have the fastest car he’s
ever driven. Since purchasing a Volt, Ari frequently tells people that
electric vehicles are “really, really great” and corrects misconceptions
about electric cars being slow or bad for the environment. Ari explained
that “the concept of where our electricity comes from is very muddy for most
people,” so he points friends to the California Independent System
Operator’s real-time data on our power supply and says “it blows their minds
to see how much of our power comes from renewables when I’m charging at
work.”
Lessons for Policymakers

While each person’s story is unique, there are several things the workers I
spoke with had in common. Everyone credited the workplace charging stations
with their decision to go electric. Also, when these workers got their first
electric vehicles, their only acquaintances with electric vehicles were HRL
colleagues. Once they began driving an electric vehicle, the HRL workers
encouraged their colleagues to do the same, and any subsequent car purchases
in their families were also electric.

These stories suggest that workplace chargers are spurring people to choose
electric cars, and not just serving people who would have bought electric
cars anyway. Our experiences illustrate the California Energy Commission’s
findings that, “when residents of multifamily housing are unable to charge
at home, having an available site to charge at work or access to other
public locations can serve as an alternative. If located far from home,
workplace and public charging can also help [battery electric vehicle]
owners extend their range and [plug-in hybrid electric vehicle] owners
increase their electric miles driven.”

As prices of electric vehicles decline—with analysts predicting electric
cars will be cheaper than their gas-burning counterparts by the mid-2020s—it
becomes imperative that all Californians have access to vehicle charging.
The opportunity to drive an electric car shouldn’t be limited to people who
own a home with a garage. Workplace charging is one key element of
democratizing access to electric cars, and we need to move aggressively if
we are going to meet this challenge.

Electric utilities have a big role to play. According to HRL, support from
Southern California Edison is the “only reason” it ultimately increased its
number of installed EV chargers to 21.

The California Public Utilities Commission should approve large-scale
investments in charging infrastructure, accelerating the transition to
electric vehicles to help meet California’s ambitious climate goals and cut
pollution in a region with some of the nation’s worst air quality.

Rapid investments in workplace charging are critical to helping consumers
ditch their gas guzzlers for vehicles that won’t cook the planet.
[© earthjustice.org]


+ (EVSE.fr infrastructure advanced compared to EVSE.au)
https://www.afr.com/business/transport/atlas-arteria-s-french-toll-road-charges-ahead-with-electric-vehicles-20190422-p51g2o
Atlas Arteria's French toll road charges ahead with electric vehicles
Apr 23, 2019  Australian Financial Review-Registrations of electric
chargeable vehicles have been rising in France ... France's Autoroutes
Paris-Rhin-Rhone ... runs through eastern France to the borders of Germany,
Switzerland and Italy, ... has charging stations every 46km along its 2318km
network ...




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