The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Drivers not yet dialled in

- Jack Mckeown MoToring ediTor

Motorists are steering clear of pay-byphone parking bays as cash remains the more popular method of payment, the AA says.

The motoring organisati­on’s survey of 16,239 members found 70% of respondent­s would look to park somewhere else if faced with a spot that required a phone payment. Administra­tion fees and voice-controlled phone payment systems were cited by the AA as the main factors that deter people.

Close to 80% of pensioners who took part in the survey also said they would avoid pay-by-phone parking bays, while the same proportion of motorists on low incomes said the same thing.

Jack Cousens, head of roads policy for the AA, said: “All providers should make it easier to pay for parking. Not everyone has a smartphone to pay via an app and not everyone is keen to talk to a robot to pay for an hour’s stay.”

Meanwhile, the National Grid has hit out at claims the UK would need 10 new nuclear power plants to cope with the government’s 2040 petrol and diesel car ban. It has been reported in the media that in order to cope with the energy requiremen­ts of a countrywid­e switch to electric vehicles, the UK would need to build as many as 10 nuclear power plants.

But the energy company said these claims are misleading. In its Future Energy Scenarios (FES) analysis, published in July, the National Grid laid out a selection of energy-use scenarios based on consumer attitudes, economic prosperity, EV uptake and other factors.

Of the four scenarios published, Two Degrees was the one the National Grid thought most in line with the government’s 2040 announceme­nt. Under this scenario, it predicts additional peakenergy demand from EVs alone would be about 5 GW, which represents an 8% increase on today’s peak-demand value.

The claims surroundin­g peak demand rising by as much as 30 GW are based on another scenario called High EV, which the National Grid says is far less likely to happen.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? The AA is calling on parking providers to make it easier for people to pay for a bay.
Picture: PA. The AA is calling on parking providers to make it easier for people to pay for a bay.

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