https://www.politico.com/story/2019/09/16/oil-industry-electric-car-1729429
The oil industry vs. the electric car
09/16/2019  GAVIN BADE

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Electric cars are seen charging. | Dan Kitwood/Getty Images
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Electric vehicles could make up nearly half the fleet of passenger cars and
trucks by 2040. But oil and gas companies are striking back.

The oil industry is trying to crush the booming electric car movement.

Groups backed by industry giants like Exxon Mobil and the Koch empire are
waging a state-by-state, multimillion-dollar battle to squelch utilities’
plans to build charging stations across the country. Environmentalists call
the fight a reprise of the “Who Killed the Electric Car?” battles that
doomed an earlier generation of battery-driven vehicles in the 1990s.

Oil-backed groups have challenged electric companies’ plans in 10 states,
according to utility commission filings reviewed by POLITICO, waging
regulatory and lobbying campaigns against the proposals. The showdown is
taking place as utilities, eager to increase the demand for power, push for
approval to build charging networks in locations such as shopping centers
and rest stops in more than half the nation.

“Fossil fuel interests control 90 percent of the transportation fuel market
in the U.S. and are really feeling threatened,” said Gina Coplon-Newfield,
director of the electric vehicle initiative at the Sierra Club.

The counterattack involves an array of trade associations and
industry-funded political groups representing every segment of the petroleum
sector.

In the Midwest, the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers, a trade
group for gasoline makers, has filed comments against charging plans in
Kansas and Missouri, and has opposed Colorado’s new zero-emission vehicle
mandate as part of a “Freedom to Drive” coalition of auto dealers and oil
groups. The typical consumer, they say, should not have to pay for
incentives or charging stations that mainly benefit people wealthy enough to
afford cars like Teslas.

“We feel like we're on the side of the angels here in terms of wanting this
to be a free market and not wanting people who don't use the service to have
to pay for service,” said Derrick Morgan, senior vice president at the fuel
and petrochemicals group.

In Illinois and Iowa, the American Petroleum Institute joined with Americans
for Prosperity — a political group funded by the Koch oil empire — to oppose
utilities’ electric vehicle investments. The owner of a large refinery
joined other industrial interests to oppose utility charging and shared
mobility plans in Minnesota.

In Massachusetts, API teamed with gasoline marketers and convenience stores
to oppose an electric vehicle charging buildout from the utility National
Grid. The Western States Petroleum Association has opposed utility charging
plans in Arizona alongside AFP, as well as electric vehicle legislation in
California. And in Maryland, API aligned with convenience stores, gasoline
stations and truck-stop owners to oppose utilities’ electric vehicle plans.

Oil groups are far from alone in critiquing the utility charging proposals.
Consumer advocates and some independent charging firms argue that utilities,
which operate as monopolies, are using electric vehicle infrastructure to
pad their balance sheets because their captive customers will have to pay
for the investments.

Utilities say the upfront cost of charging stations is minimal for
ratepayers, and that customers' bills may actually drop as electric vehicle
adoption grows because the cost of power grid infrastructure will be spread
over a larger base of power demand. In Maryland, four utilities proposed
building 24,000 chargers last year at an estimated cost of 25 to 42 cents
per ratepayer per month. The proposal from three Exelon utilities and one
owned by FirstEnergy would have been the largest utility plan outside
California, with power companies installing chargers in homes and apartment
buildings and at workplaces and public locations like grocery stores or rest
stops.

So far, the oil sector hasn’t seen much success combating utility plans.
Though the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers celebrated a Kansas
utility’s decision to withdraw a charging plan last year, analysts say that
in most cases where regulators scale back utility plans, they aren’t doing
it in response to the oil industry's pleas.

“So far, the main consequence [of oil lobbying] I've seen has been some
delays, but I think the fight is ongoing,” said Samantha Houston, a clean
vehicles analyst at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “I wouldn't attribute
modifications to electric vehicle programs to API, but they are certainly
making a good attempt to muddy the waters in their interventions.”

In Maryland, regulators scaled back the utility proposal, allowing them to
build only 5,000 chargers at public sites over the next few years. But the
state’s head regulator said the decision largely hinged on competition and
price concerns, and that the oil industry’s arguments were underdeveloped.

“I personally did not find those arguments to be compelling,” said Maryland
Public Service Commission Chairman Jason Stanek. “There is obviously a push
toward the electrification of transportation and [these are] parochial
concerns pushed by the petroleum industry to preserve its market share.”

Even so, Stanek, Houston and others expect oil companies to keep up the
fight as the threat of electric vehicles grows.

“I think the struggle here will probably continue for a while,” Houston
said. “Internal combustion engines still have a pretty significant market
share and the oil and gas industry doesn't want to see that go anywhere.”

Whether gasoline-powered vehicles can hold on to their market is
increasingly in doubt. By 2040, electric vehicles could make up as much as
40 percent of the U.S. passenger vehicle fleet and 60 percent of sales, up
from 2 percent of sales today, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
That would erase demand for more than 3 million barrels of oil a day — or
more than 20 percent of current transportation consumption.

Oil groups are also fighting in Congress to oppose tax credits for electric
vehicles, pushing lawmakers to increase electric vehicle fees — 26 states
have them today — and supporting the Trump administration’s proposed
rollback of Obama-era fuel efficiency standards. Auto dealers represent one
of the prime business sectors allied with President Donald Trump on the
rollback.

The motivation for the lobbying push stems from an existential threat facing
the global oil sector in the rise of the electric vehicle.

Electric vehicle mandates in China and many European Union nations have set
a target of phasing out gasoline vehicles by 2040 or sooner. That will
continue driving battery prices down in the coming years, said David
Doherty, an oil specialist at Bloomberg New Energy Finance. And that, he
said, should create a tipping point in the middle of the next decade as
passenger electric vehicles become widely competitive with gas-powered ones
— meaning the oil industry has only a few years to stem the tide.

"Then we'll see electric vehicles really ramp up as a percentage of sales,”
Doherty said.

With electric vehicles increasing in competitiveness, the biggest hurdle to
greater adoption is deploying enough chargers to fuel their growth. That,
Stanek said, helps explain the oil sector’s intensified lobbying campaign.
Global Translations

“People need to actually see electric vehicle charging stations and know
that they exist prior to actually purchasing an [electric] vehicle,” said
the Maryland regulator, who works in a state where Republican Gov. Larry
Hogan wants to see 300,000 electric vehicles in 2025 — up from less than
20,000 today. “As more drivers see public charging pop up at gas stations,
libraries and on the side of the road, it'll prompt consumers to think twice
when making their next vehicle purchase.”

Publicly, both sides are coy about the confrontation. Oil supporters
downplay the threat presented by electric vehicles, arguing they still
aren’t as functional as internal combustion engine cars and pointing out
that many analysts expect that global fossil fuel demand will continue to be
strong mid-century.

“I actually think the internal combustion engine is going to be around a
long time, barring some kind of a major breakthrough of electric vehicle
technology that hasn’t happened yet and doesn't look like it's likely in the
near future,” Morgan said. “I think internal combustion engines remain very,
very competitive for decades to come.”

Meanwhile, the Edison Electric Institute, a major utility trade group, says
it’s too early to know whether electric and gasoline-powered vehicles are
headed for a collision.

“I don’t think it’s us and them,” said EEI senior director Becky Knox. “At
this point in the market, [electric vehicles] are still relatively new. I
don't know if that is a collision course.”

Even so, veterans of the power sector say it’s obvious that utilities have
stepped up their electric vehicle lobbying in recent years. Whereas utility
electric vehicle charging was rare outside of California at mid-decade, more
than 50 utilities in 25 states and the District of Columbia have now
proposed charging programs. EEI and its members have also quietly lobbied
Congress to extend and expand electric vehicle incentives, and they’ve
fought directly with oil groups to defeat model legislation against
utilities’ electric vehicle plans at meetings of business leaders and
conservative lawmakers.

“The electric utilities are not doing this out of altruism,” Stanek said.
“There is a benefit in terms of a return in allowing them to [charge
ratepayers] for certain vehicle infrastructure.”

Some observers say utilities’ initial apprehension about pushing electric
vehicles has led the power companies to overdo their requests to bill
ratepayers for the charging buildout.

“They finally have worked through the blindingly obvious benefits, and
having been recalcitrant, are now reaping incentives and concessions that
should not have been necessary in the first place,” said Karl Rábago, a
former Texas utility regulator and senior policy adviser at the Pace Energy
and Climate Center. “Feels a bit like rope a dope.”

The utilities’ shift toward electric vehicles has put environmental groups
in an awkward position: After fighting utilities for years to adopt
renewable energy, most have come to view them as powerful allies to cut
transportation pollution.

“Sierra Club has a long and rich history of suing utilities and opposing
utilities when [they] are propping up fossil fuels,” Coplon-Newfield said.
“But when it comes to the acceleration of electric vehicles, we've actually
found some common ground.”

Environmentalists say many of the oil sector’s arguments against electric
vehicles recall the 1990s, when fossil fuel groups and automakers waged a
successful campaign to scale back California’s ambitious zero-emission
vehicle mandate — as recounted in the popular documentary "Who Killed the
Electric Car?"

Back then, California was set to mandate that an increasing percentage of
cars sold in the state be non-gasoline vehicles, culminating in 10 percent
in 2003. But state air regulators backed down after a dedicated lobbying
campaign from car companies and oil interests, who opposed electric vehicle
charging plans and argued there was no demand for the vehicles.

One key change since then is the position of the automotive sector. While
U.S. automakers fought hard against the California regulations in the past,
they are increasingly receptive to state electric vehicle targets,
particularly when they are paired with incentives for the vehicles'
purchase.

Ten other states today follow zero-emission vehicle targets set by
California, which now mandate that electric vehicles make up about 8 percent
of new vehicle sales by 2025. In August, the Alliance of Automobile
Manufacturers, the sector’s leading trade group, signed on to support a
zero-emission target in Colorado because it included incentives for
purchasing electric vehicles.

But like the oil sector, electric vehicles are also splitting the auto
industry. Car dealerships make much of their revenue from servicing
gasoline-powered engines and publicly oppose electric vehicle mandates and
utility charging programs in Colorado and elsewhere.

With the automakers singing a new tune and the price of electric vehicles
continuing to fall, Stanek says state regulators should be ready for the
front lines of the battle between utilities and the oil industry to spread
to their states soon.

“The petroleum lobby and the electric utility lobby — I’m talking about API
vs. EEI — we are going to see a competition between them for market share
like we haven’t seen before,” he said.
[© politico.com]




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