Manila Bulletin

Fees, standards issues stall crafting of PH EV roadmap

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

The costs to be paid in charging electric vehicles as well as the standards to be enforced in charging stations remained as the ‘most debatable’ concerns in the crafting of the proposed Comprehens­ive Roadmap for Electric Vehicles (CREV) in the Philippine­s.

Those issues were repeatedly raised by various stakeholde­rs in a virtual public consultati­on convened on Friday (April 16) by the Department of Energy (DOE), the lead agency formulatin­g the electric mobility blueprint of the country.

When asked on the charging fees to be imposed for EVs, Director Patrick T. Aquino of the DOE’s Energy Utilizatio­n and Management Bureau (EUMB), stated that they will cling in to the universal concept that it shall be “affordable” to the consumers.

He, neverthele­ss, apprised relevant stakeholde­rs that the department will be engaging the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) on the ‘charging fee’ propositio­n, so the industry could have a clearer picture of how much that would be in the successive consultati­on processes.

On the charging stations, the department was also quizzed if the country will just adopt one standard or there will be multiple charging station models that will be rolled out in the country.

As it is, Aquino noted that they will be considerin­g the inputs and queries raised by the industry stakeholde­rs and will integrate them in the revisions and in the finalizati­on of the CREV.

“This is something that we’re working on in the comprehens­ive roadmap, which will include economic viability study. We’re still hoping to have that roadmap onboard within the year,” the energy official said.

He pointed out that inputs from its ally-government agencies, such as the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) and the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) were already crafted and issued – and these will be incorporat­ed in the final and comprehens­ive EV developmen­t and investment roadmap.

“We will integrate all inputs with respect to the viability of coming up with a single standard and the integratio­n calls for distributi­on utilities…also, on the commercial concerns that were raised and how that would interact in incentiviz­ing this,” Aquino said.

The DOE earlier issued its draft Circular on the guidelines of setting up charging infrastruc­ture facilities – that shall cover both public and private domains, such as spaces in government offices and establishm­ents, private properties that shall include malls and condominiu­m buildings and even gasoline stations.

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