Stirling Observer

Clacks EV point charges

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Clackmanna­nshire Council has agreed to introduce an electric vehicle (EV) charge point tariff across its charging network.

The decision, which will also see a minimum spend introduced and an overstay charge, was approved at last week’s full council meeting and will come into force later this year.

The authority says the new charge, which was consulted on as part of the 2023/24 budget engagement exercise, will ensure the day-to-day running costs of the network are covered by users and will address increased costs to the council due to providing energy for free at a time when energy costs are increasing.

The new tariff, as set out on the council’s website, is as follows: Fast / AC (7kw or 22kw), £0.48 per kwh; Rapid / DC, £0.69 per kwh 2.1.2.

There will be a minimum spend of £5.

The overstay charge for fast and rapid is: Fast / AC – (22kw only) £12 after first four hours plus 10 minutes grace and £12 subsequent­ly after every four-hour duration; Rapid / DC - £20 after first 60 minutes plus 10 minutes grace and £20 every subsequent hour.

The council also agreed a discount of 10 per cent for Clackmanna­nshire residents without access to off-street parking/home charging.

The authority has been responsibl­e for installing and operating public Electric Vehicle Charging Points (EVCP) since around 2014. There are currently 29 EVCPS in operation across the Clackmanna­nshire, with an additional seven EVCPS currently in progress.

The tariff is based on costs associated with the electricit­y supply costs, as well as the annual maintenanc­e, warranty and data fees. In 2022/23 the council spent around £178,000 on electricit­y for public EVCPS.

The meeting heard that experience from other local authoritie­s is that having a tariff in place leads to an immediate drop in usage following the introducti­on of a tariff. This is generally due to users who can charge at home opting to do so.

To deliver the thousands of additional EVCPS necessary across the country over the next five to ten years, it is estimated that £300m to £400m of new investment will be required, most of which will need to come from the private sector.

Free or below cost EV charging provided by local authoritie­s is currently deterring private sector investment to step into the market to provide this capacity.

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