Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

OREGON HALTS REBATES FOR BUYING EVS BECAUSE OF TOO MUCH DEMAND

‘Really shows the program is a victim of our own success’

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SALEM, Ore. — Oregon will temporaril­y suspend rebates for buying or leasing an electric vehicle for a year starting in May because too many people are applying and the program is running out of money, The Oregonian/OregonLive reported Thursday.

A growing number of Oregonians are buying or leasing electric vehicles, with over 60,600 registered in the state.

The Oregon Department of Environmen­tal Quality announced last week the suspension of the Clean Vehicle Rebate Program that has disbursed more than $71 million over five years to help people buy or lease roughly 25,000 of those vehicles. A fifth of the rebates went to low- and moderate-income households, state data shows.

Since the end of 2018, the state has offered two cash rebates for Oregon drivers who buy or lease electric vehicles or plug-in hybrids under $50,000. The standard rebate of up to $2,500 is available regardless of income and can be received at participat­ing dealers. The “charge ahead” rebate of $5,000 is aimed at low- or moderate-income households and must be accessed via a mail-in applicatio­n. The two rebates can be combined for up to $7,500 cash back.

“Even though we’re announcing a temporary suspension, it really shows the program is a victim of our own success,” said Rachel Sakata, senior air quality planner with the environmen­tal quality department. “We’re one of the top states in the nation in terms of the percentage of EV sales.”

Oregon’s Department of Transporta­tion estimates that people will be driving 1.5 million electric vehicles in the state by 2035.

 ?? DON RYAN/AP FILE ?? Cars at charging stations in front of the Portland General Electric headquarte­rs building.
DON RYAN/AP FILE Cars at charging stations in front of the Portland General Electric headquarte­rs building.

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