Ottawa Citizen

EV charging startup dcbel clinches US$40M in funding

- MARTIN PATRIQUIN

MONTREAL A Montreal company behind a charger capable of using an electric vehicle to power the home has secured US$40 million in funding from a host of major U.S. and Canadian investors.

Founded in 2015, dcbel began taking orders for its r16 home charger late last year.

The unit provides “Level 3” charging for EVs, meaning it converts AC current from electrical grids and renewable sources like home solar panels to DC current used by EVs.

The r16 also works in reverse, effectivel­y turning the EV into a giant battery that can power a home in the event of a power outage.

Equity Investors in the round include New York-based hedge fund Coatue Management as well as San Francisco's Narrative Fund.

Other investors in the round include Vy Capital, Real Ventures, WTI, as well as a total of five family offices and private investors in the U.S. and Canada.

Silicon Valley Bank is providing venture debt. Real Ventures partner John Stokes believes dcbel is poised to do well in the U.S., which, under the Joe Biden administra­tion, has suddenly become a viable greentech market.

“Dcbel is beyond anything that exists. Even Tesla, which has so many of the charging components, doesn't have a single central unit that can manage all aspects of solar recharge, vehicle fast recharge and vehicle-to-home and battery backup,” Stokes told The Logic. Montreal-based Real Ventures first invested in the company in 2018, and has invested a total of US$7 million over three rounds in dcbel.

The unit retails for US$4,999, and the company has begun taking orders and expects to begin shipping this summer.

“It's the `iPhone of energy,'” said dcbel founder and CEO Marc-André Forget. “If you buy solar or buy an EV, you're going to buy a dcbel.”

Dcbel is first targeting suburban and rural markets in California and Texas, both of which are blessed with large population­s and cursed with often unreliable energy grids. California, which has the most registered EVs in the U.S. and whose clean-energy legislatio­n mandates solar panels on new single-family homes, is a particular­ly ripe market for dcbel, said Forget.

Even Tesla ... doesn't have a single central unit that can manage all aspects of solar recharge, vehicle fast recharge and vehicle-to-home and battery backup.

The unit uses AI to modulate household electricit­y use to take advantage of off-peak hours.

Level 3 chargers, which are typically used in public EV-charging stations, can charge an EV battery from empty to 80 per cent in 30 to 45 minutes. There are few commercial­ly available Level 3 homechargi­ng units.

About the size of a desktop computer, the wall-mounted unit can be installed inside or outside the home, and charge up to two vehicles at once at Level 3 and 2 rates.

When there is a power outage, the unit creates a closed-loop circuit between the house and the electric vehicle, allowing the latter to power the former.

The r16 will be available in Canada in 2022, along with the r8, a smaller unit that offers only Level 2 charging, which will retail for US$1,999.

For more news about the innovation economy, visit thelogic.co

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