Top Banner
Assessing the Electric Vehicles Supply Equipment (EVSE, charging station) in Georgia Soheil Shayegh Enterprise Innovation Institute
13

Assessing the Electric Vehicles Supply Equipment (EVSE, charging station) in Georgia

Jan 02, 2016

Download

Documents

teegan-chandler

Assessing the Electric Vehicles Supply Equipment (EVSE, charging station) in Georgia. Soheil Shayegh. Enterprise Innovation Institute. Background. Atlanta: No. 2 in Electric Vehicle (EV) adoption Biggest US market for Nissan Leaf sales Incentives: $5,000 state tax credit - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript

PowerPoint Presentation

Assessing the Electric Vehicles Supply Equipment (EVSE, charging station) in GeorgiaSoheil ShayeghEnterprise Innovation Institute

BackgroundAtlanta:No. 2 in Electric Vehicle (EV) adoptionBiggest US market for Nissan Leaf salesIncentives:$5,000 state tax credit$7,500 federal tax creditOpportunity:80% of EVs in five metro Atlanta counties

EV Charging Timeline

1994-2000: GM inductive MagneCharge for home charging2009: Inductive charging standard SAE-J1772

2010:SAE-J1772 adopted by GM, Chrysler, Ford, Toyota, Honda, Nissan and Tesla2010:The CHdeMO standard developed in Japan. 2011:SAE Combined Charging System (Combo Coupler) introduced2012:Audi, BMW, Daimler, Ford, General Motors, Porsche and Volkswagen agreed to introduce Combo CouplerTechnology3

Level 1Level 2Level 3

Technology

Source: http://www.mpoweruk.com/infrastructure.htm

TechnologyCharging TypeCharging optionCapacityEquipmentRangeLevel 1120 VAC, 15 or 20 ampsA cord: standard, three-prong household plug and a J1772 standard connector2-5 miles per hour of chargingLevel 2240-280 VAC, 20 or 100 amps

J1772-connector10-20 miles per hour of chargingLevel 3DC fast charge480 VAC, 125 ampsoff-board charger to provide the AC to DC conversion30 min to charge 80% batterySource: Installation Guide For Electric Vehicle Supply Equipment (EVSE), The Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources, 2011TechnologyCharging time and Range AnxietyRange Anxiety:Battery swappingTesla (90 sec, every supercharging station, $60)Issues: customer trust, battery ownershipFree loaner

TechnologyEconomic Analysis for adoption of 1,000 EVsMethodology: Input-output model for economic impactIMPLAN software

Assumptions:Loss of earnings at gas stationsTax credit added to incomeSavings on fuel spendingEconomyEconomic Impact(per 1000 EVs)ActivityDirect monetaryEconomic ImpactEmploymentIncomeOutputFuel spending removed from gas stations($1,547,000)-3.4($128,254)($303,320)Fuel saving added to household income$1,547,000 14$624,685 $1,818,910 Federal tax added to household income$7,500,000 67.7$3,028,533 $8,818,244 Net Impact$7,500,000 78 $3,524,964 $10,333,834 EconomyFederal tax cap 200,000Nissan leaf reaches in 3-4 years9EV charging stations in GeorgiaCurrent status:216 stations, 472 charging outletsLocations:Downtown areasState Routes and Interstates

Sources: www.afdc.energy.govwww.plugincars.comPolicy

Source: www.plugshare.comColumbusMaconAugustaSavannah160 miles84 miles107 miles145 milesRanges:Nissan Leaf: 84 milesTesla Roadstar: 200 milesPolicyPolicy RecommendationsPotential locations:Workplace chargingPublic access:Designated parkingVisitor attractionZoning codes:Permitting processMaintenance3rd Party Risk

PolicyNissan: No Charge to charge12AcknowledgementGreg Crittenden, Metro Plug-InDon Francis, Clean Cities GeorgiaBen Echols, Georgia PowerCharles Huling, Strategic energy Institute, GTBen Hill, Enterprise Innovation Institute, GTBrian Stockton, City of Woodstock, GARuthie Norton, City of Atlanta, GA