With forecasts of more than 20 million EVs on U.S. roads by 2030, a new report from the Smart Electric Power Alliance (SEPA) builds the case for a strong utility role in transportation electrification, by identifying opportunities for utilities to minimize infrastructure challenges, improve internal planning and forecasting methods, and provide best-in-class customer service.
Combining results from an industry survey with personal insights of utility industry experts, the paper delivers recommendations and best practices for improving how utilities should support, plan and deploy EV charging infrastructure. With similar time horizons for realizing large EV deployments and utility infrastructure deployments, the message is clear: all utilities should be preparing today for significant EV penetration.
"Being at the forefront of commercial fleets' transition to electric mobility, major corporations tell us every day they need to convert their vehicles to electric to stay competitive," said Dan Wilson, Senior Product Manager at Chanje. "Not a week goes by without seeing a major EV announcement, such as FedEx ordering 1,000 of our electric trucks."
Other key findings include:
"The rapid acceleration in consumer electric vehicle adoption and higher load demand across transit and commercial fleets of medium and heavy-duty electrification will require utilities to focus on developing more flexible distribution grids," said Paul Stith, Director, Strategy & Innovation at Black & Veatch. "This has become increasingly clear as it can take years to design, plan and build the charging infrastructure and supporting grid assets required to serve concentrated EV demand zones."
According to Erika Myers, Principal of Transportation Electrification at SEPA, "Electric vehicles offer a tremendous opportunity to integrate more clean energy into our fuel mix by increasing electricity demand and utilizing the EV batteries for vehicle-grid integration. By eliminating barriers for EV infrastructure rollouts, we are laying the groundwork for a better future. Knowing that an electrified transportation future is in the best interest of utilities and society, this report loudly proclaims: Be prepared and be proactive."
For more information on the report, click here.
Source: Smart Electric Power Alliance (SEPA)