clean cities electric vehicle support activities

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Vehicle Technologies Program eere.energy.gov Clean Cities Program Electric Vehicle Support Activities Erin Russell-Story Clean Cities Regional Project Manager, Mid-Atlantic/Great Lakes Region US Department of Energy National Energy Technology Laboratory

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Presented by Erin Russell-Story, U.S. Department of Energy, on August 24, 2011, at the "Charge Up Wisconsin!" plug-in electric vehicle implementation meeting hosted by Wisconsin Clean Cities.

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Page 1: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Vehicle Technologies Program eere.energy.gov

Clean Cities Program

Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Erin Russell-Story

Clean Cities Regional Project Manager,

Mid-Atlantic/Great Lakes Region

US Department of Energy

National Energy Technology Laboratory

Page 2: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 2

• EV Market Drivers

• US DOE & Clean Cities Activities

• Clean Cities Tools and Resources

Presentation Overview

Page 3: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 3

Electric & Plug-in Vehicle

Market Drivers

Page 4: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 4

Goal: 1 Million Electric Vehicles by 2015

“With more research and

incentives, we can break our

dependence on oil with biofuels,

and become the first country to

have a million electric vehicles

on the road by 2015”

- President Barack Obama,

2011 State of the Union

Page 5: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 5

PEV Market Drivers

1. CAFE/GHG Regulation

- The new standard = estimated combined average mile per

gallon (mpg) level of 34.1 mpg by 2016 – about a 45%

increase in only 5 years

2. Zero Emission Vehicle Mandates (ZEV)

- ZEV manufacturers earn maximum credits for each vehicle

sold, which can be traded to other manufacturers

- Effects vehicles sold in CA and “CA states”

3. Infrastructure (EVSE) Development

- ARRA’s Transportation Electrification program funding will

deploy about 20,000 electric charging locations across the

U.S.

Page 6: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 6

Transportation is dependant on foreign oil, electricity is diverse

Driver 4: Reduce Reliance on Petroleum

Page 7: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 7

Driver 5: PEV Deployment Programs

• A number of programs, both regional and national, are being

implemented by organizations to promote the

commercialization of EVs

• These organizations work with the private and public fleets, potential retail customers and the manufacturers to promote the deployment of Electric Vehicles

Page 8: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 8

Fleet Customer Profile

Universities

Corporate

Charging mainly at work

Drive 30 - 60 miles per day

Average 12,000 miles / year

Value the lifetime operations

costs savings

Use car mainly for inner city

business travel/commuting,

deliveries, service calls and car

sharing fleets

“Return to base” usage pattern

reduces infrastructure requirements

in early stages

Utilities

Governments

Commercial

Who are fleet customers? What are their characteristics?

Page 9: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 9

Consumer Costumer Profile

Who are consumer customers?

Commuters

What are their characteristics?

Charging mainly at home

Drive less than 40 miles per day

Average 12,000 miles / year

Value the lifetime operations

cost savings and environmental

benefits

Use car mainly for inner city

travel/commuting, shuttling,

shopping and school

“Return to home” usage pattern

reduces extended infrastructure

requirements in early stages

Soccer Moms &

Dads

Students

Shoppers

Page 10: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 10

US DOE & Clean Cities Activities

Page 11: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 11

American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)

• Through the Recovery Act, USDOE is investing $12

billion in advanced vehicle technologies.

• This includes more than $5 billion to electrify America’s

transportation sector, matched at least dollar per dollar

by private companies.

• $2.4 billion to establish 30 EV battery and component

manufacturing plants and EV demonstration projects.

• $2.6 billion in loans to Nissan, Tesla and Fisker to establish EV

manufacturing facilities in TN, CA and DE.

Page 12: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 12

Transportation Electrification Program

• 8 demonstration projects will put 13,000 electric

vehicles on the road

– Includes more than 4,700 Chevy Volts in more than a dozen

cities.

• Grantees will deploy 20,000 additional electric

charging locations, up from 500 today.

Clean Cities Pilot Program

– 600+ PHEVs, NEVs and Evs

– Hundreds of chargers

American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)

Page 13: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 13

Clean Cities ARRA PEV/EVSE Projects

HD

PHEV LD EV HD EV NEV

TOTAL

PEVs

Public EV

Stations

Private EV

Stations

TOTAL

STATIONS

39 613 248 305 1205 407 167 574+

Page 14: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 14

Coalition State HD

PHEV

LD

EV NEV

TOTAL

PEVs

Public

EV

Stations

Private

EV

Stations

TOTAL

STATIONS

North Carolina/South Carolina

Clean Cities (4 Coalitions)

NC-

SC - - 26 26 104 - 104

Connecticut Clean Cities

(4 Coalitions) CT - - - - 11 - 11

New York State

(5 Coalitions NY 7 14 - 21 93 - 93

Chicago Area Clean Cities IL 4 3 - - 7 124 131

Clean Fuels Ohio OH 7 - - 7 50 5 55

Clean Cities ARRA PEV/EVSE Projects

Page 15: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 15

Coalition State HD

PHEV

LD

EV

HD

EV NEV

TOTAL

PEVs

Public

EV

Stations

Private

EV

Stations

TOTAL

STATIONS

Dallas-Fort Worth Clean

Cities TX - - 9 25 34 - 4 4

Kansas City Regional

Clean Cities Coalition MO 25 1 1 - 27 12 - 12

Puget Sound Clean Cities WA - 594 203 - 797 130 - 130

Wisconsin Clean Cities WI - - - 254 254 - 11 11

Ann Arbor Clean Cities MI 3 - - - 3 - 23 23

Clean Cities ARRA PEV/EVSE Projects

Page 16: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 16

DOE / Clean Cities Five-Year Strategic Plan

Expedite the planning for

and development of

infrastructure and the

targeted growth of the

marketplace for electric drive

vehicles.

Electric Drive –

Strategic Direction

Page 17: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 17

Electric Drive – 3-5 Year Priorities

A. Advance electric drive technology and market development by

building strong coalitions of key stakeholders and partners –

including Clean Cities coordinators, electric utilities, OEMs,

technology developers, and governments to build “electric-drive

ready” communities.

B. Support planning for electric drive infrastructure development in

regions that are OEM “target markets” for deploying electric drive

vehicles.

C. Provide coordinators, coalitions, and stakeholders with “best

available information” about electric drive vehicles, technology,

economics, markets, and infrastructure.

D. For coordinators and stakeholders, provide access to training about

electric drive and plug-in electric vehicles, technology, and

infrastructure on an ongoing basis.

DOE / Clean Cities Five-Year Strategic Plan

Page 18: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 18

Purpose: Advance community-level preparation for plug-in vehicles

Attendance: 150 people in attendance and 700 on-line attendees (local

governments, utilities, Clean Cities coalitions, auto dealers and others).

Key Findings:

• Partnerships must include government, utilities, private business,

non-profit organizations, retail, airports and others

• Communities should have forum to share successes and lessons

• Consistent permitting, installation and inspection protocols needed

• Standardized training regimen needed for installers; emergency

responders need to be ready

• Current financial incentives are available but limited

• Multi-unit dwellings may require strategies, regulatory revisions

• Neighborhood impacts for charging are a concern

Community Readiness for Plug-in Vehicles Workshop July 22, 2010 at DOE

Page 19: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

eere.energy.gov

Actions

• Host quarterly webinars for Clean Cities coalitions, community

leaders and other stakeholders on crucial topics involving electric

drive vehicles.

• Include the newest electric drive vehicle models in NREL’s Alternative

Fuel and Advanced Technology Vehicles guide.

• Update the GREET Fleet tool to include the per-mile electricity use

and electricity generation mix for electric drive vehicles.

• Construct a database of national, regional, state and local initiatives

and incentives for electric drive deployment.

• Update the Alternative Fuel Station Locator as new public charging

stations become available.

DOE Near-Term Action Plan for Promoting Electric Drive Vehicles

Page 20: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

eere.energy.gov

Actions

• Explore ways to get OEM demo vehicles into

communities for road shows and public events.

• Develop a peer exchange among cities via webinars on

lessons learned and key issues, including:

– Placing infrastructure strategically

– Implementing niche market fleet applications for electric drive

– Working with electrical contractors and their unions

– Working with first responders, code officials, etc.

– Capture data and lessons learned to develop case studies from

major electrification projects funded by the American Recovery

and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).

DOE Near-Term Action Plan for Promoting Electric Drive Vehicles

Page 21: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 21

Clean Cities Tools & Resources

Page 22: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Clean Cities / 22

Clean Cities Web Resources

Clean Cities

AFDC

FuelEconomy.gov

Page 23: Clean Cities Electric Vehicle Support Activities

Vehicle Technologies Program eere.energy.gov

Websites and Contact Information

DOE EERE Information Center and Technical Response Service

Website: http://www.eere.energy.gov/afdc/informationcenter.html

Phone: 1-800-EERE-INF (1-877-337-3463)

E-mail: [email protected]

Hours: 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. EST

Clean Cities Website

www.eere.energy.gov/ccities/

Clean Cities Coordinators

www.eere.energy.gov/cleancities/progs/coordinators.php

Alternative Fuels & Advanced Vehicles Data Center

www.eere.energy.gov/afdc

American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Website

http://www.energy.gov/recovery/cleancities.htm

Erin Russell-Story

Clean Cities Regional Project Manager

U.S. Department of Energy

National Energy Technology Laboratory

Pittsburgh, PA

Office: (412) 386-7334

[email protected]

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