https://www.nrdc.org/experts/miles-muller/california-moves-make-paying-charging-easier
California Moves to Make Paying for EV Charging Easier
August 12, 2019  Miles Muller

[image  
https://assets.nrdc.org/sites/default/files/styles/full_content/public/media-uploads/ev_charging_stress_blog_-_mm_-_v1_002.png?itok=a793M1l8
  / Jessica Russo, NRDC
]

If you drive up to a gas station, you can be relatively confident that
you’ll be able to pay with your debit or credit card—but that’s often not
the case at electric vehicle (EV) charging stations. Instead of just pulling
out a credit card, EV drivers are often forced to carry a mess of
proprietary key fobs and cards for all the different charging networks.
Fortunately, California recently approved regulations that will require
credit card readers at charging stations so people can pay for charging as
easily as they pay for gasoline. However, a bill moving through the
California Legislature, sponsored by proprietary charging companies, would
unwind those reasonable consumer regulations.

In 2013, the California Legislature passed a bill to make paying for
charging as simple and convenient as paying for gasoline, sponsored by EV
drivers who were frustrated with inconsistent payment experiences at public
charging stations. Nearly six years later—after the industry failed to solve
the problem under initial, more-flexible requirements—the California Air
Resources Board (CARB) developed regulations that would set clear and
consistent payment standards for new public stations. The standards,
developed after a long public process, would require all new public charging
stations to offer the familiar chip card readers currently seen at gas
pumps, public parking meters, and even your local grocery store.

Requiring these stations to accept credit and debit payment by chip card
readers would align them with existing customer payment preferences and
ensure more equitable access to charging for low-income drivers who lack
other payment options like mobile wallets or contactless cards. Recent
surveys show that three in four drivers in the U.S. pay for gas with a card
when fueling up and that the overwhelming preference is for payment by
credit, debit, or prepaid card, while only 0.1% of households prefer
alternative payment options like mobile apps—on par with money orders.

While the regulations require chip card readers to ensure payment options at
public charging stations reflect the market where it is today, they also
allow flexibility for changes in technology and consumer preferences to meet
the market wherever it may be in the future. In addition to chip card
readers, the regulations also “future-proof” new stations by requiring them
to accept mobile payment. Notably, these payment standards merely set a
floor—charging station providers are still free to exceed these minimum
requirements and install any additional payment options they desire, such as
contactless card readers or network card/fob readers. The regulations also
provide for a “technology review” going forward, allowing the designated
minimum payment options to be updated if other technologies such as
contactless credit cards or mobile payment eventually become more prevalent.

Assembly Bill 1424: A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing

While these standards would go a long way in making paying for charging a
more seamless and predictable experience for all EV drivers, a bill
currently pending in the California Legislature sponsored by companies that
operate proprietary charging networks would undo the regulations. Assembly
Bill (AB) 1424, the “Electric Vehicle Charging Stations Open Access Act”
would revoke the progress that EV drivers have already spent six years
waiting for and allow EV charging companies to offer contactless cards in
lieu of chip card readers—while forcing drivers who don’t have contactless
cards to call 1-800 numbers if they want to pay for charging with a credit
card (slogging through the same kinds of phone trees you may have used to
hunt down movie times in the 90s).

Contactless cards account for only 5% of the market—and only 0.18% of credit
card transactions—today. Adopting a technology with such low levels of
adoption as the baseline for equitable payment access, on the speculative
promise that one day it might become more prevalent, is unwise. The
appropriate solution, as reflected in the technology review already
incorporated in CARB’s regulations, is to meet the market where it is today
while allowing for changes in the future if and when the market changes.

 Even if a contactless future does eventually come, it will likely be
unevenly distributed. While contactless cards already only account for a
minuscule percentage of cards on the market, low-income drivers are even
more likely to lack contactless cards. Many low-income drivers rely on
prepaid debit cards, which will be the last types of cards to integrate
contactless technology (possibly lagging by several years). If these drivers
can’t pull up and pay for charging with their prepaid debit cards without
calling a 1-800 number and navigating a frustrating phone tree, we’ll be
making EVs even less accessible to low- and moderate-income drivers.

That’s partially why the Charge Ahead California Campaign (led by the
Coalition for Clean Air, Communities for a Better Environment, Environment
California, The Greenlining Institute, and NRDC), which works to bring clean
transportation options to the state’s most disadvantaged communities, is
opposed—along with every other public interest organization that has taken a
position on AB 1424. To meet California’s air quality, climate, and equity
goals, we simply can’t afford to make it more difficult to pay for EV
charging than it is to pay for gasoline or diesel.
[© nrdc.org]


https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=201920200AB1424
Assembly Bill 1424  AB-1424 - California Legislative Information
The Electric Vehicle Charging Stations Open Access Act prohibits the
charging of a subscription fee on persons desiring to use an electric
vehicle charging ...


+
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/Germany-Has-Many-EVs-On-The-Road-4k-rebates-tp4694588.html
Germany Has Many EVs On The Road> €4k rebates
Germany Has More EVs On The Road Than Any Other European Country
August 16th, 2019  There are more EVs (includes pih) on the road in Germany
than in any other nation in Europe... New vehicle owners can expect rebates
of €4,000 for purely EVs ...
https://cleantechnica.com/files/2017/10/25-Paris-to-Poland-Tesla-Shuttle-Road-Trip-e1565970402353.jpg




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