Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Calif. steps for EV affordabil­ity won’t include carmaker mandates

- BY KATHLEEN RONAYNE

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Discounted prices, car-share programs and at least 1 million more public charging stations are among the ways California will try to make electric cars easier to buy and drive as it phases out the sale of gas-powered cars.

But the state won’t force automakers to participat­e in any equity programs designed to ensure people of all income levels can buy electric cars.

“This rule had the opportunit­y to really set the path for lower income households to have increased access and affordabil­ity [for] electric vehicles, but it missed the mark,” said Roman Partida-Lopez, legal counsel for transporta­tion equity with The Greenlinin­g Institute.

Instead, car companies will get extra credit toward their sales quotas if they make cars available to car share or other programs aimed at disadvanta­ged California­ns. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom has pledged $10 billion over six years for incentives to get electric vehicles into the hands of low-income residents, charging infrastruc­ture, and other efforts to put cleaner cars and trucks on the road.

The Stockton Mobility Collective is one example. Designed to increase transporta­tion options in disadvanta­ged parts of the city, the collective will set up five to seven neighborho­od charging stations with 30 electric cars people can rent out on an hourly or daily basis.

Car ownership in South Stockton is low, so interest in the program is high, said Christine Corrales, senior regional planner for the program.

The regulation­s passed by the California Air Resources Board last week say that 2035 the state will require automakers to sell only cars that run on electricit­y or hydrogen, though some can be plug-in hybrids that use gas and batteries. People will still be able to buy used cars that run on gas, and car companies will still sell some plug-in hybrids. Beyond questions of affordabil­ity and access, the state will need to overcome skepticism of people who think electric cars simply aren’t for them.

“We’ve got to get past the elitism that’s involved with owning an electric car,” said Daniel Myatt, who brought an electric car in 2020 through the state’s Clean Cars 4 All program, which he qualified for when he was out of work due to an illness.

Since 2015, more than 13,000 electric cars have been purchased through the program. It offers people up to $9,500 for people to trade in their gas cars for electric or hybrid models.

About 38% of the money spent on a separate rebate program has gone toward low-income or disadvanta­ged communitie­s, and the state has spent hundreds of millions of dollars building charging stations in those neighborho­ods. Today, though, there are just 80,000 public charging stations around the state, far short of the 1.2 million the state estimates it needs by 2030.

Under the new regulation­s, car makers can get extra credit toward their sales quotas if they participat­e in several equity programs.

Those programs include: Selling cars at a discount to car-share or other community programs; making sure cars that come off lease go to California dealers that participat­e in trade-in programs; or selling cars at a discounted price. To meet the third option, cars would have to cost less than $20,275 and light-duty trucks less than $26,670 to qualify for the extra credit. It only applies to model years 2026 through 2028, and there’s no restrictio­n on who those cars can be sold to.

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP ?? A parking spot reserved for electric vehicles in the parking lot of a metro station in Norwalk, California, last Monday.
JAE C. HONG/AP A parking spot reserved for electric vehicles in the parking lot of a metro station in Norwalk, California, last Monday.

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