Los Angeles Times

PUC approves $1 billion for EV charging project

State agency sees use of heavy-duty, midsize electric trucks as key to cutting emissions.

- By Rob Nikolewski Nikolewski writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

The California Public Utilities Commission has approved a $1-billion vehicle electrific­ation charging project, with most of the money earmarked to accelerate the number of midsize and heavy-duty trucks on the state’s roads.

Some 70% of the funds will go to charging mediumand heavy-duty vehicles, which combine to account for a disproport­ionate amount of greenhouse gas emissions in the transporta­tion sector. Costs of the fiveyear program will be spread out among utility ratepayers across California.

“It’s the highest priority,” Commission­er Clifford Rechtschaf­fen said. “We have very stringent state goals establishe­d by the Air Resources Board to electrify medium- and heavy-duty trucks and they need charging infrastruc­ture in order to electrify their fleets.”

The remaining 30% will go to charging light-duty electric vehicles at or near multi-unit dwellings.

The program places a priority on low-income and tribal areas, with 65% of the funds going to underserve­d communitie­s. No money is allocated for building EV charging infrastruc­ture at individual homes.

The program will start in 2025 and run through 2029, with $200 million allocated each year through the state’s utilities. Money will be given back to customers in the form of rebates.

Details of how the program will work still need to be figured out. A study will be conducted to determine the size of the rebate, and customers who want to install the equipment will apply to a third-party administra­tor to receive the rebate.

“We don’t know exactly what the amounts will be and how much the budget will cover,” Rechtschaf­fen said, “but the idea is to cover all or most of the costs of the equipment.”

The charging infrastruc­ture for trucks will be installed at a variety of places, including truck stops, ports and at facilities owned by companies that manage fleets. Transit agency depots are also potential sites for buses.

Although the cost to ratepayers is expected to be low — a commission staffer estimated less than $1 a month for each San Diego Gas & Electric customer, for example — the rebate program comes as many people complain that their monthly bills keep getting higher.

“I think over time electrific­ation — including transporta­tion electrific­ation — will result in lower rates,” Rechtschaf­fen said.

The rebate program, approved Nov. 17 on a 4-0 vote, includes a provision that calls for an evaluation of the program and its funding amounts after three years.

“If at that point, we determine it’s just too much to bear for ratepayers, we can reconsider,” Rechtschaf­fen said.

The Public Advocates Office, the CPUC’s independen­t watchdog for ratepayers, issued a position paper last week on funding transporta­tion electrific­ation in California and said utility customers should not fund transporta­tion electrific­ation infrastruc­ture, calling the practice regressive.

“Increasing electric rates to fund the state’s [greenhouse gas] reduction initiative­s, therefore, places a disproport­ionate burden on low-income families,” the paper said. “This is also counterpro­ductive as this increases the cost of fueling electric vehicles, which in turn reduces the incentive to purchase electric vehicles.”

It’s estimated that the transporta­tion sector is responsibl­e for more than half of all of California’s carbon pollution, 80% of smogformin­g pollution and 95% of toxic diesel emissions.

While many California­ns are familiar with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s executive order banning the sale of new gasoline-powered cars by 2035, the mandate also directed the California Air Resources Board to develop regulation­s requiring all operations of medium- and heavyduty vehicles to achieve zero emissions by 2045.

The rule goes into effect by 2035 for drayage trucks — vehicles commonly used to transport freight from an ocean port to a point nearby.

Like electric passenger cars, a major challenge for the zero-emission trucking segment is solving a “chicken and the egg” problem: Customers may be reluctant to buy an EV because there aren’t enough charging stations and there aren’t enough stations because EVs make up a relatively small percentage of vehicles on the road.

The state budget includes $10 billion over the next six years to put more electric cars and trucks on roadways and in ports. The federal government’s Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act will funnel several hundred million more dollars to California for similar efforts.

“We need all that and more, and we need a lot of private investment as well,” Rechtschaf­fen said. “Public investment is really essential in the next three, five, 10 years as the market transforms itself.”

 ?? Rob Nikolewski San Diego Union-Tribune ?? THE CHARGING infrastruc­ture for electric trucks will be installed at sites such as truck stops and ports.
Rob Nikolewski San Diego Union-Tribune THE CHARGING infrastruc­ture for electric trucks will be installed at sites such as truck stops and ports.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States