Marysville Appeal-Democrat

General Motors, partner offer easier, faster payment method for EV fast charging

- Tribune News Service The Detroit News

Tommy Doran recalled driving to a charging station last winter and having to take off his gloves to pay in an app to charge up his Chevrolet Bolt EUV.

“It’s frigid in Michigan,” General Motors

Co.’s manager of EV infrastruc­ture and EV charging experience told The Detroit News. “That’s not nice at all.”

Now, GM customers have access to a solution that lets them bypass the clunky payment method of commercial EV charging and hit the road again sooner: Plug and Charge. It allows owners of GM

EVS to pull up to a DC fast charger, plug in and automatica­lly be charged for the electricit­y.

The ability for a charger to recognize a vehicle and charge the owner like a credit card has been held as a way to alleviate the often cumbersome payment system of apps, RFID fobs and accounts — often for various networks.

The technology is launching with GM’S charging network partner Evgo, though the plan to is expand the technology to others as well. Most Evgo fast chargers work with the service.

Drivers whose vehicles are DC compatible, from most Bolts to the newest GMC Hummer and

Cadillac Lyriq, need active Onstar connected services, which start at $24.99 per month, and an Evgo account connected to the GM brand app for their vehicle, where they can activate the service for free.

The EVS have a unique identifica­tion when drivers plug in the cable that makes the connection possible.

“You click in the charger, and you’re done,” said Hoss Hassani, EV ecosystem director. “It’s a seamless experience.”

GM says it’s a leader to introduce a Plug and Charge feature to the company’s existing and future EVS that is designed to work on multiple public networks in North

America. Tesla Inc. has offered a similar service through its supercharg­er network since 2012, and more vehicles like the Mustang Mach-e and Porsche Taycan are compatible with Plug and Charge features.

The rollout is part of GM’S commitment to invest nearly $750 million through 2025 in charging infrastruc­ture through its Ultium Charge 360 ecosystem that now includes a network of 11 charging station operators. It’s partnering with dealers to install 40,000 Level 2 chargers. With Evgo, it’s also installing 2,750 fast chargers in 40 metropolit­an areas by 2025.

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