Los Angeles Times

State may jolt EV market

Lawmaker proposes a $3-billion boost in electric car rebates.

- By Russ Mitchell russ.mitchell@latimes.com

A bill to provide $3 billion in subsidies for electric car buyers wends its way through the Legislatur­e.

SAN FRANCISCO — California’s electric car rebate program needs a recharge to meet the state’s clean air goals, said Democrat Assemblyma­n Phil Ting of San Francisco.

His bill to provide $3 billion in subsidies for electric car buyers over 12 years is wending its way through the Legislatur­e. On Wednesday, Ting held a news conference in San Francisco to promote it.

Gov. Jerry Brown wants 1.5 million electric cars on California roads by 2025, but the total so far is 300,000, Ting noted. “We’re nowhere close to that.”

Hence, he wants a “very significan­t subsidy program” to jump-start sales.

California already offers $2,500 in rebates to buyers of electric cars, on top of the federal government’s $7,500. Ting would boost the incentive by adding enough of a state rebate to help bring the consumer cost of EVs on par with that of similarly sized and equipped gasoline cars.

The bill leaves the rebate amount to be determined. Ting said the subsidies would tail off as the electric car market improved.

A combinatio­n of subsidies and the greater range being offered in new electric car models will goose the market enough to meet the 1.5-million goal, he said.

The bill “will jolt the EV market to the mainstream,” said Dan Lashof, chief operating officer of NextGen Climate America, one of several environmen­tal groups backing Ting’s bill.

If enacted, the law would establish a new government program, the California Electric Vehicle Initiative, within the state Air Resources Board, “in coordinati­on” with the California Energy Commission and the state Public Utilities Commission. The nature of the coordinati­on is not spelled out.

The program would “begin a review to adopt revisions” to California laws meant to encourage zeroemissi­on vehicles. That includes the state’s Clean Vehicle Rebate Program, which gives rebates to electric car buyers on a sliding scale. Right now, state rebates range from $1,500 to $2,000 for pure electric and plug-in hybrid cars, on top of federal incentives.

But there’s an income cap for the state money: Single people who earn $150,000 or more and families that earn $300,000 or more don’t quality for rebates.

To pay for the rebates, the state draws from revenue collected from its greenhouse gas cap-and-trade system, under which rights to emit polluting gases up to certain levels are traded.

The rebate money is appropriat­ed each year. If capand-trade money runs out in less than 12 months, rebates are suspended until the next appropriat­ion. The Ting bill would ensure continuous funding, making the program more predictabl­e for buyers and car dealers, and allow dealers to advertise rebates, Ting said.

The cap-and-trade system is underperfo­rming projection­s, and the state is wrestling over legislatio­n that would force a major overhaul of the program.

The Ting bill also calls for more emphasis on low-income buyers, getting charging stations into low-income neighborho­ods and providing electric car-sharing programs “to serve disadvanta­ged communitie­s.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? ASSEMBLYMA­N Phil Ting (D-San Francisco), left, is promoting a bill to jump-start electric vehicle sales.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ASSEMBLYMA­N Phil Ting (D-San Francisco), left, is promoting a bill to jump-start electric vehicle sales.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States