Money Magazine Australia

Where to find free fuel for your EV

- CARSALES.COM.AU

The notion of free fuel sounds like a supermarke­t incentive that you pay for somewhere else, but driving an electric car is a whole different kettle of fish. In many ways you can drasticall­y reduce – or even remove – the cost to refill its battery.

Free fuel is totally feasible with EVs. But how?

First of all, electricit­y is available just about everywhere: at home, work, the shops, your dealership and a growing network of public charging stations. So you can essentiall­y recharge a battery-powered vehicle wherever there is a powerpoint.

Now, that doesn’t mean it’s always free. But some major shopping centres, hotels, restaurant­s and tourist destinatio­ns offer no-cost electric vehicle charging as an incentive to attract early adopters and meet corporate sustainabi­lity targets.

We also know of a number of local councils that have installed public electric vehicle charging stations but are yet to charge you for topping up.

So, a little research about the EV charging infrastruc­ture in your local region and along any routes and destinatio­ns you plan to visit could pay off – literally.

If you work for a progressiv­e company and drive an EV, negotiate a deal as part of your working conditions.

Considerin­g the vehicle is likely to remain stationary for at least eight hours a day (if you’re not on the road), it should be enough time to fully replenish the battery.

Even if you have an EV with a large-capacity battery, the cost to fill it up once a week is between $35 and $50, which shouldn’t be difficult to negotiate with your employer, whether that’s equivalent to an hour of overtime or taking on an additional responsibi­lity.

If you’re charging at home, the most obvious way to get free fuel is to install solar panels and charge the vehicle during daylight hours.

A 5kW solar system will cost about $5000 to install (after any government rebate incentive is applied) and generates an average daily output of around 19.4kWh, enough to provide 100km to 200km of driving range (depending on the vehicle).

If you live in (or plan to buy) an apartment, newer buildings may offer charging infrastruc­ture as part of the tenancy.

As we said, nothing ever comes for free, and there is some cost to all of the above options – but not every one of them hits your hip pocket as much, or in the same way, as paying for petrol.

But electric cars do actually generate free fuel while they’re driving through regenerati­ve braking.

This is a process where the electric motor is reversed when the vehicle is decelerati­ng and feeds electricit­y back into the battery pack, allowing you to extend the range of the vehicle by altering your driving habits, slowing down earlier when coming to a halt and backing off the accelerato­r when travelling down hills.

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