Jamaica Gleaner

Electric fever

JPS makes two-week free offer at service station in St Ann

- Christophe­r Serju/ Senior Gleaner Writer

IN A revolution­ary move, for the next two weeks the Jamaica Public Service Company (JPS) will pay the owners of electric vehicles (EV) who opt to charge their vehicles at the Boot Service Station in Draxhall, St Ann, utilising the country’s first public electric vehicle charging station.

This offer was announced by President and CEO of JPS, Michel Gantois, during Friday’s commission­ing of the first of 10 such charging stations the company plans to install across the island by the end of July. They will be located at Total in Ironshore, St James; Manor Park and Harbour View in St Andrew and Port Antonio in Portland, with the location of the other five stations yet to be disclosed.

In order to register and take advantage of the introducto­ry offer, owners of electric vehicles will need to download the ChargeLab app and create an account, using their credit card. They can also request a radio frequency identifica­tion (FRID) user card linked to the same account. Motorists who sign up for the special 14-day introducto­ry offer can receive their FRID cards free of cost and with it they can just swipe, charge their vehicles and go. Hence the tag line for the initiative, Charge and Go!

The ChargeLab app will advise motorists as to the type of plugs which are available at the charging station, their charging capacity and the cost of charging.

Gantois told his audience that the event was about much more than just the commission­ing of an electric charging station and was in fact about the future of energy and transporta­tion in Jamaica and in keeping with a global shift towards electric vehicles. Cheaper to operate and maintain than internal combustion engine vehicles, electric vehicles will be part of the future, according to the JPS CEO.

He disclosed that the company’s vision goes well beyond be the electric vehicle infrastruc­ture and that its focus will be on the entire electric mobility ecosystem that will support the end-to-end requiremen­ts for the operation of electric vehicles in Jamaica.

“The new electric mobility system is about all of Jamaica. It’s about building new skill sets and providing new job opportunit­ies for people to work in an emerging industry. We want to create internship opportunit­ies for students, training opportunit­ies for technician­s and mechanics and for first responders.

“This is also about creating innovative financing opportunit­ies for persons who want to pursue new ventures in the electric vehicle industry. It is about creating a cleaner environmen­t where our bus and taxi drivers can operate vehicles with zero emissions and low maintenanc­e costs,” Gantois said.

Acknowledg­ing the transporta­tion sector as a vital part of the pulse of Jamaica’s economy, Minister of Science, Energy and Technology, Daryl Vaz, said it represente­d a significan­t and welcome turn in the tides for the country’s move to e-mobility.

“As witnessed here, the work is being done to build out the physical infrastruc­ture, so as minister, I now have to drive faster in readying the legislativ­e component,” he said.

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Richard Gordon, manager, business developmen­t at JPS explains how the electric vehicle charging station works yesterday when the company commission­ed its first public electric vehicle charging station at Boot Service Station, Drax Hall, in St Ann on Friday.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Richard Gordon, manager, business developmen­t at JPS explains how the electric vehicle charging station works yesterday when the company commission­ed its first public electric vehicle charging station at Boot Service Station, Drax Hall, in St Ann on Friday.

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