https://energynews.us/2019/04/08/northeast/in-connecticut-low-electric-vehicle-supply-threatens-transportation-goals/
In Connecticut, low electric vehicle supply threatens transportation goals
2019/04/08  Meg Dalton

[image  / Jeremy / Wikimedia Commons
https://energynews.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Tesla_dealership_10_Herbert_Street_St_Leonards_New_South_Wales_24365078756-1170x780.jpg
Vehicles charge at a Tesla dealership. The automaker recently announced that
it would shift all sales to online only, which could make it easier for
Connecticut residents to purchase electric cars.
]

Environmental advocates are pushing to make buying and owning electric
vehicles in the state easier.

Like many Connecticut residents, Martha Klein had to cross state lines when
she decided to buy an electric vehicle. Her “tale of woe,” which she
jokingly calls it, involved driving an hour each way from her home in
Norfolk to a dealership in Poughkeepsie, New York, where she ultimately
purchased her Chevrolet Bolt.

“It’s stupid beyond belief that people cannot buy vehicles where they live,”
Klein said.

Klein first learned about the Bolt on the pages of the New York Times in
2016. She assumed it would eventually make its way to dealerships in
Connecticut. A year passed, and Klein grew tired of waiting. Local
dealerships had yet to introduce the model, so she would look elsewhere —
out of state.

For years, environmental advocates in Connecticut have been pushing to help
make the process of buying and operating electric vehicles easier. State
officials have set a goal of having 500,000 electric vehicles on the road in
Connecticut by 2030, a commitment they made alongside seven other states in
2013.

Meeting that goal is unlikely unless electric vehicles become more
accessible to consumers. Right now, about 6,000 residents currently have
either a plug-in hybrid or fully electric vehicle.

“We’re going to need to do a lot more to reach our goals,” said Samantha
Dynowski, state director of Connecticut’s chapter of the Sierra Club.

That includes availability at dealerships, which is the biggest barrier to
widespread adoption, according to Dynowski. For Klein, shopping for her 
Chevrolet Bolt was not only a headache; she also lost out on the savings
usually offered to Connecticut residents who go electric.

“I lost out on hundreds of dollars of rebate because I had to go to New York
State to buy my car,” she said.

The state’s incentive program, the Connecticut Hydrogen and Electric
Automobile Purchase Rebate, or CHEAPR, offers incentives of up to $5,000 for
people who purchase or lease electric vehicles — but only if they purchase
from a franchised dealership in the state.

The incentive program is the only major difference between buying an
electric vehicle and a conventional car. The rebates are intended to
encourage residents to switch to electric, but many, including Klein, miss
out because of the low supply of available electric vehicles in the state.

The problem isn’t unique to Connecticut, according to Joel Levin, executive
director of Plug In America, a national nonprofit focused on electric
vehicles. Across the United States, the deployment of electric vehicles has
been limited in terms of quantity and geography.

That’s largely due to a California state regulation called the Zero Emission
Vehicle, or ZEV, program, which requires manufacturers to sell a certain
number of electric vehicles in the Golden State. While the California Air
Resources Board manages it, nine other states, including Connecticut, have
since adopted the mandate.

The program was intended to push automakers to research, manufacture and
sell more electric vehicles. To an extent, it has been successful — but that
success has been largely concentrated in California, thanks in part to how
the regulation actually works, Levin said. The program relies on a credit
system. Automakers are assigned credits based on the type and number of
zero-emission cars they sell. For example, a battery electric car would earn
the company more credits than a plug-in hybrid. And each state has a credit
quota automakers must meet to continue selling in the state.

“You don’t necessarily have to produce cars [in each state], but have to
generate a certain number credits,” Levin said.

Up until 2018, the program had a “travel provision” which allowed automakers
to earn credits in other ZEV states for sales made in California. The
provision helped automakers build up hefty credit banks in other states;
they could then use those credits to meet the state’s ZEV requirements
without actually selling electric vehicles in that state. Automakers could
also buy credits from other companies with a surplus of credits, like Tesla.

This complicated provisional loophole incentivized a concentration of sales
in California, where the market and culture is more accommodating to the
sale of electric vehicles.

“Dealers know how to sell them and people want to buy them,” Levin said.
Elsewhere, including in Connecticut, there’s a learning curve for
dealerships trying to sell electric vehicles and for consumers understanding
how they work.

Now that the travel provision has been removed from the ZEV program, it’s
expected that the availability and sales numbers outside of California will
increase.

Another complicating factor is that Tesla’s reach was limited by Connecticut
state law up until very recently. Connecticut law prohibits manufacturers
from selling cars directly to consumers; they have to be sold through a
franchised dealership in Connecticut. Tesla’s business model was to sell
directly to buyers, but it recently announced that it would shift all sales
worldwide to online only.

The decision renders the franchise-friendly Connecticut law moot for Tesla.
Previously, residents looking to purchase a Tesla Model 3?, for example,
would have to purchase in a neighboring state like New York or
Massachusetts. Now they can order a Tesla with a few clicks.

Dynowski says a lot of misperceptions continue to surround electric
vehicles, including cost. For a while, the price point limited who could buy
electric, but more affordable options are now on the table, including
Klein’s beloved Bolt, which costs about $35,000, and Tesla’s new Model 3.
When factoring in rebates, some electric cars from Nissan and Hyundai hover
around $20,000.

Several Connecticut environmental organizations, like the Sierra Club and
the EV Club of Connecticut, organize show-and-tell events around the state,
including National Drive Electric Week, where participants share their
experiences owning or leasing an electric vehicle.

Advocates say greater access to electric vehicles is critical to
Connecticut’s clean energy ambitions. The transportation sector is the
largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the state, accounting for
nearly 40 percent of total emissions, according to the Connecticut
Department of Energy and Environmental Protection. This year, there’s a
groundswell of legislative activity at the state Capitol, including a bill
legalizing the direct sale of electric vehicles (though Tesla no longer
requires it to operate). Environmental advocates are also pushing for
legislation to update building codes to include charging stations, amend
state fleet vehicle requirements, and expand the incentive program for
purchasing of electric vehicles.
[© energynews.us]


+ (e-VOL support UAV w/ tilting rotors carries 33lbs r:6mi ts:111mph)
MBDA Spectre UAV Is Essentially A Flying Guided Missile Launcher
April 8, 2019  Unveiled at ... exhibition in Millbrook, UK, Spectre is an
electric Vertical Take-off and Landing UAV that is designed to provide rapid
close air support ...
https://d2cdo4blch85n8.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/MBDA-Spectre-Electric-VTOL-Combat-UAV-image-1-630x420.jpg




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use:
 http://evdl.org/archive/


{brucedp.neocities.org}

--
Sent from: http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to