The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Republican pushes for electric vehicle market

- Jim Galloway Political Insider

Last month, Public Utilities Fortnightl­y — a riveting national publicatio­n if ever there was one — dipped ever so slightly into Georgia history.

The magazine featured a piece by Tim Echols, a Republican member of the state Public Service Commission. He pointed to the debate in Washington over whether the current $7,500 tax credit on electric vehicle purchases should be expanded or eliminated.

Echols warned Congress not to make the same mistake that our GOP-controlled Legislatur­e did in 2015. State lawmakers erased the state’s $5,000 tax credit on electric vehicle purchases and hit buyers with a tax instead. “The move led to a nearly 90% drop in new electric car registrati­ons and cost Georgia income, jobs and cleaner air,” Echols wrote.

Several years ago, Echols successful­ly teamed with fellow PSC member Lauren “Bubba” McDonald to persuade Georgia Power, and fellow Republican­s, to take solar power seriously. Echols is now on another crusade — to revive the electric vehicle market in Georgia.

On Tuesday, the state Public Service Commission approved a Georgia Power rate increase that could begin increasing residentia­l bills as early as next month. One of the overlooked aspects of the package was a requiremen­t that Georgia Power spend $8 million a year, over three years — on new

charging stations for vehicles, and for infrastruc­ture to provide the current.

Inclusion of the provision wasn’t fought by the utility. “They’re not dragging their feet on this like they did on solar,” Echols said in an interview.

No, the people Echols needs to persuade are his fellow Republican­s, particular­ly those in the state Capitol. In fact, remember that November reference he made to the “cleaner air” that comes with electric vehicles? You may not see it again.

“We’ve talked about the environmen­t. We talk about climate change and how (the cars) help with pollution. We haven’t gone after the economics. I think the messaging needs to change on this,” Echols said.

And the messenger needs to be a Republican.

Here’s the pitch Echols is making: On a per-person basis, residentia­l customers are using much less electricit­y than they once did. “Because people are getting more efficient things, like LED bulbs. They use 90% less power,” he said. Then there are smart thermostat­s, and better-insulated homes.

Bottom line: The per-household demand for electricit­y is dropping, but the cost for generating that power remains static.

“The only thing that’s causing any kind of personal growth out there, in terms of appliances or home power is electric cars. Electric cars use a fair amount of power when you’re charging at home. And most people do charge at home,” said Echols, who is on his fourth electric vehicle, a Chevy Bolt.

Echols pointed to Cobb EMC, which has a program that allows consumers “free” electricit­y from 12 to 6 a.m. “They’re doing it to get electric vehicles,” he said. “You program your car to start charging at midnight.”

An emphasis on electric vehicles also strengthen­s the justificat­ion for Republican support of the continued constructi­on of those two new nuclear reactors at Plant Vogtle in east Georgia, Echols said — despite those busted deadlines and cost overruns.

Like it or not, the PSC commission­er said, Washington is ultimately likely to levy some sort of carbon tax to discourage the use of fossil fuels. A friendly local environmen­t for electric vehicles would ease any economic discomfort that transition creates.

But Echols isn’t just in a defensive posture. He heads up an electric vehicle “brain trust” that gathers once a month — to share new informatio­n and chart out the future course of EVs in Georgia. That future includes autonomous vehicles.

A Mercedes Benz representa­tive was there for Monday’s meeting. So was one from Porsche, too. And the Southern Co., parent company of Georgia power.

The “brain trust” meets on the premises of Cox Automotive property on Metropolit­an Avenue in south Atlanta. (Cox Automotive is a division of Cox Enterprise­s, which also owns The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.)

Echols would like to see the area — located between downtown Atlanta and Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport — become a center for electric vehicle developmen­t.

Echols has suggested to Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms that the main thoroughfa­re, once known as Stewart Avenue, be renamed once again — this time as “Electric Avenue.”

Another member of the EV study group is state Rep. Todd Jones, R-Cumming. He is the author of House Bill 732, introduced last year, which would claw back $2,500 of the $5,000 tax credit for electric vehicles that was erased four years ago.

The measure would also offer a $500 tax credit for homeowners who install vehicle chargers. Introduced last April, the bill has yet to get a hearing.

Given that Gov. Brian Kemp, anticipati­ng hard months ahead, has ordered two years’ worth of budget cuts, Echols said that the time may not be ripe to push for more tax credits that would eat into state revenue.

Nonetheles­s, Echols will be one of the participan­ts in a two-day policy forum on the future of electric transporta­tion held on the Georgia Tech campus in January, just as state lawmakers gather for the 2020 session. Vehicles will be available for test drives.

Forty-eight different models of vehicles sold in the U.S. use plugs. Within 20 years, it’s predicted half of all vehicles will be electric. The situation reminded Echols of the 2013 fight over solar energy.

“There were a lot of angry Republican­s over that thing. They thought we had gone over to the dark side,” Echols said. “But eventually, as those solar farms wound up in poor counties across south Georgia, raising their tax digest, letting them get ambulances and libraries and softball fields, Republican­s eventually said — you know, this is a good thing.”

It could happen again. But it will take work, even in Washington. In a budget compromise reached this week, Congress didn’t scrap the federal tax credit on electric vehicles outright, as the White House had threatened.

But they didn’t expand the 200,000 vehicle-per-carmaker cap, which Tesla and General Motors have already exceeded. Other companies will quickly do the same — which means the federal tax credit will soon be no more.

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Tim Echols
 ?? AJC 2017 ?? Tim Echols heads up an electric vehicle “brain trust” that gathers once a month to share new informatio­n and chart out the future course of EVs in Georgia. That future includes autonomous vehicles.
AJC 2017 Tim Echols heads up an electric vehicle “brain trust” that gathers once a month to share new informatio­n and chart out the future course of EVs in Georgia. That future includes autonomous vehicles.

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