Showing posts with label MOBILITY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MOBILITY. Show all posts

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Electric vehicle charging station market in the US to exceed $4B by 2016

Some interesting numbers in this study: Zpryme predicts the number of EV/PHEVs sold in 2016 will reach 203,200, and that the charging infrastructure and charging services market is will grow from $776.8 million in 2011 to $4.45 billion in 2016 (CAGR of 41.6%).

The projections in the electric vehicle study by Zpryme's EV Insights Practice and sponsored by Airbiquity (download ‘The Electric Vehicle Study’ for free www.zpryme.com) show that the charging service market value is expected to grow at faster rate than the charging station market value, but the charging station market is expected to be almost eight times larger than the service industry by 2016.

With such high anticipation for the growing U.S. EV market, developing and deploying charging stations has quickly become an extremely competitive race. Both large companies and start-ups are vying for market share, including Coulomb Technologies, ClipperCreek, ECOtality, ABB, GE, Siemens, Leviton, AeroVironment and Pep Stations.


Some key market value projections (2011 - 2016):


Electric vehicle sales:

Annual EV/PHEV unit sales are projected grow by 36.2% annually from 2011 to 2016, from 43,400 to 203,200.

The total EV/PHEV stock are projected to grow from 104,200 in 2011 to 730,700 in 2016.

Charging Stations:

Home (level II) charging station unit sales are projected to grow by 37.7% annually from 2011 to 2016, from 25,400 to 125,900.

Home (level II) charging station sales will grow from $239.6 million to $1.07 billion during this time period. Home charging stations are projected to account for 32.1% of the market value in 2011 and 27.0% in 2016.

Public (level II) charging station unit sales are projected to grow by 43.1% annually from 2011 to 2016, from 13,600 to 81,300.

Public (level II) charging station sales will grow from $282.0 million to $1.60 billion during this time period. Level II charging stations are projected to account for 37.8% of the market value in 2011 and 40.7% in 2016.

Fast (level III) charging station sales will grow from $193.4 million to $1.15 billion during this time period. Level III charging stations are projected to account for 25.9% of the market in 2011 and 29.1% 2016. (see table 1 above)

Fast (level III) charging station unit sales are projected to grow by 44.2% annually from 2011 to 2016, from 2,200 to 13,500.

EV Charging Service Users:

Annual new charging service users are projected to grow by 40.4% annually from 2011 to 2016, from 27,600 to 150,400.

The cumulative total number of charging service users is projected to grow from 39,800 in 2011 to 574,900 million in 2016.
READ MORE - Electric vehicle charging station market in the US to exceed $4B by 2016

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

5 electric vehicle predictions for 2011 by PluginCars.com

PluginCars.com's John Gartner is not alone when he says that 2011 will be the year of the revenge of the electric car, but he reveals some interesting key trends identified by Pike Research in this white paper. Some can be summarized in these 5 electric vehicle predictions for 2011. Having worked in the media industry, I cannot help myself but laugh at #5. So true.

1 - The majority of people who drive a plug-in vehicle won't own it. Thanks to car rental fleets, taxis, and car share programs, getting people into plug-in vehicles will be more influential in the long run than getting them to sign on the dotted line.


2 - Automakers will get push back from EV owners about how long it takes vehicles to fully charge. Most vehicle charging will be done overnight, enabling owners to wake up to a fully charged battery without concern for the rate at which it was charged. But because automakers decided to take the cautious (and less expensive) approach of installing onboard charging equipment that provides a maximum of 3.3 kW to the batteries, a full charge will take longer than necessary leaving some consumers feeling like they overpaid for charging equipment.


3 - The most popular selling EVs won't have four wheels. Electric two-wheeled vehicles, including bicycles, scooters and motorcycles are a huge global market that will continue to overshadow electric passenger vehicles for the foreseeable future. China is by far the largest market, with more than 48 million sales projected. In North America, the sale of two-wheeled EVs will outnumber passenger PEVs by approximately 8:1 in 2011, but the gap will be narrowed to close to 2 to 1 by 2015 as passenger vehicles sales will grow much more quickly.


4 - Many EV charging stations will spend the majority of their time idle. The strategy of installing a network of charging equipment may be good psychologically for EV owners and the automakers, but the business benefit for the owners of charging equipment will be lacking during the early days of EV sales. During 2011 and 2012 there will not be sufficient penetration of EVs for charging spots to see many visits–if any—per day.


5 - Somebody somewhere will have a bad EV experience and the media will overreact. The first time a driver is left "stranded" by running out of charge will be cause célèbre for the doubters to highlight the superiority of gas cars. The potential also exists for EV owner frustration if the promised all-electric driving range advertised is not realized. Heavy-footed drivers and trips taken in extreme weather will substantially cut into driving efficiency, but that should not be a surprise or especially noteworthy.

Read more of it and get the white paper at PluginCars.com
READ MORE - 5 electric vehicle predictions for 2011 by PluginCars.com

Portuguese PM is the first head of government in the world to use an electric car

From the FinanzNachrichten: Portugal received delivery of the first 10 electric vehicles in Europe from Nissan as recognition of the country's pioneering work in electric mobility with the MOBI.E project.

The Prime Minister José Socrates is one of the ten recipients and will now travel exclusively by Electric Car for his official travels around the capital city. With this Portugal becomes the first country in the world to have a head of state head of government using an electric car for official matters.

Prime Minister, Jose Socrates, said:

"Portugal is extremely proud of the introduction of the electric vehicle. This initiative is only possible due the fast implementation and development of the Portuguese MOBI.E Charging Network, which is considered a leading example to the world of how to roll out electric cars. Portugal is the first country in the world to have a nation-wide smart grid for electric vehicles."

The other cars will be purchased by nine companies of the technological consortium that developed the MOBI.E solution as a clear sign of the need for a transition to Electric Mobility.

The cars were delivered Carlos Tavares, Vice-President of Nissan, in a Ceremony that occurred in Parque das Nações, in Lisbon.

Portugal Pioneer on Electric Mobility

Portugal is the first country in the world to implement an electric vehicle charging network at a national scale. The MOBI.E network, which currently spreads over 25 municipalities throughout the country, displays over 50 charging points already installed growing to more than 1300 normal charging points and 50 quick charging stations by mid-2011.

It is the only truly integrated system in the world, focusing on the user and ensuring open-access and interoperability. Such approach has drawn interest from many countries to the MOBI.E Programme.

The MOBI.E charging network is thus the first electric mobility smart grid and has established itself as a world industry benchmark.

Portugal has therefore become the definite living lab for electric mobility, and is well on its way for a more sustainable oil-independent future.

Read more...
READ MORE - Portuguese PM is the first head of government in the world to use an electric car

Friday, December 24, 2010

Deutsche Welle: Rise of electric cars prompt 'smart' electrical grids in Portugal

From DW World: Portugal’s long-term target of 750,000 electric cars fits with its smart energy plans. Already, the country has 40 percent of its energy coming from renewable sources.

The launch in Portugal in January of Nissan's Leaf marks the start of the rollout in Europe of what the company says is the first 100 percent electric car aimed at a mass market. Nissan targeted Portugal - where it will also soon be assembling batteries for the Leaf - after that country's government agreed to setting up a national network of charging points.

In fact, the network is to be compatible with any make of electric car, and is part of still more ambitious long-term plans for a genuinely "smart grid" that could help Portugal make fuller use of its fast-expanding renewable energy capacity.

In early December, amid ultra-modern architecture at the former site of the Expo 98 World Fair in Lisbon, members of the Portuguese public got the chance to test drive the Leaf.

Portuguese consumers are curious about electric cars

Comments ranged from the polite to the enthusiastic, with the lack of engine noise the most obvious characteristic of what at first glance looks like a regular five-seater family run-around. But the very lack of engine noise creates some new "problems."

"For instance, the headlamps have a specific design to avoid air going to the mirrors," said António Joaquim, the communications director of Nissan Iberia Portugal.

"The exterior mirrors on a normal car produce a lot of noise with the wind. But on this car, which doesn't make any noise from the engine, all the very small noises that on other cars are not perceptible are - let's say, uncomfortable."

The more obvious matter of charging the car seems straightforward: a small panel on the bonnet opens to reveal something rather similar to an ordinary electric plug.

"If you want to charge when you are parking inside a garage in your own house or in a shopping centre, it's better to have it on the bonnet," Joaquim added. "It's a completely different usage from a combustion engine. You just charge the car during your daily life."

Charging stations are scarce for now, but are expected to increase

There are two charging options: a partial quick charge, for example when you are on the motorway and do not want to stop for long, or a cheaper slow charge of up to eight hours.

Prospective buyers in Lisbon seemed to take the limitations of electric cars on board.

"It's a nice car, and a good prospect for someone like me who has an urban life, and drives about 30 or 40 kilometres to work and back," said one man, who declined to give his name.

The innovative design of the Leaf's lithium batteries means that you can drive the car for longer.

But even a fully-charged Leaf has a more limited range than a car with a full fuel tank. So the fact that it recently was named European Car of the Year - the first completely electric vehicle to do so - raised some eyebrows.

António Pereira, editor of Portuguese car magazine AutoMotor, told Deutsche Welle he suspected the competition's jury may have been anxious not to miss a trick, having previously failed to garland the first version of the Toyota Prius, which later became a hit.

The Nissan Leaf is, he said, an interesting experiment, and Portugal a suitably small testing ground, but with some problems.

"Recharging stations are still few [in number] and mainly in the big cities," he said.

"And in Portugal we mainly live in apartments. So either you have a parking space in your building or you have to recharge at night in the public recharging station. That's complicated because there won't be one for each."

Portugal pushing for dynmaic energy flow in its 'smart grid'

Still, the spread of on-street charging points in Portugal is the reason the Leaf is getting its European launch in the country.

The government-led Mobi.E consortium is installing 1,300 chargers around the country, compatible with all makes of car. In addition, the state is offering a 5,000 euro ($6,500) subsidy for buyers of electric cars - bringing the Leaf's price down to 30,000 euro - and a road-tax exemption.

Portugal's ambitious declared long-term target of 750,000 electric vehicles on its roads also fits with plans to expand its renewable energy output, going some way to addressing sceptics' argument that electric cars' environmental impact depends on where their power comes from.

"We have defined as a target to be the first country to have a nationwide and comprehensive infrastructure for vehicles and to work to give the necessary framework and incentives so that we can massively introduce the electric vehicle," Luís Reis of Mobi.E explained at a trade fair earlier this year.

"This is important not only in terms of the sustainability of mobility but also in terms of the strategy that we have for energy."

Read more...




READ MORE - Deutsche Welle: Rise of electric cars prompt 'smart' electrical grids in Portugal

Thursday, December 23, 2010

VIDEO: Honda debuts solar powered plug-in charging station

Honda has announced it is conducting real life tests on its network of solar powered plug-in charging stations in Japan's Saitama Prefecture.

The company is also developing smaller sized solar hydrogen stations for individual costumers that could fit in a garage.

Watch the video after the jump, from NTDTV:











READ MORE - VIDEO: Honda debuts solar powered plug-in charging station

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Portugal PM tells electric vehicles will free us from oil addiction, drives off in a Nissan Leaf

The Portuguese Prime-Minister José Sócrates said this Wednesday that electric vehicles will free his country and many other from oil addiction, as he got one of the first ten Nissan Leafs delivered in Europe.

‘They don’t make any noise, they have zero emissions and they’ll free our nations from oil addiction’, said the Prime-Minister. ‘These are the three reasons why I’ve always wanted to put Portugal in the forefront of the electric car, a vehicle that will change our cities and Europe’s transportation networks’, he added.

Mr. Sócrates also pointed that only with serious incentives European governments can promote public acceptance of the electric vehicle. ‘It shouldn’t be a thing just for three huggers’, the Prime-Minister joked.

The Leaf is going on sale in Portugal in 2011 with an estimated price of 30,000 euros, tax discount and state incentives included.

In the same ceremony, in Lisbon, Nissan’s vice-president Carlos Tavares told the media that ‘electric vehicles are vital for the future of the auto industry’, as well as ‘one of the answers to climate change’.

At the end of the ceremony, the Portuguese Prime-Minister drove off in the Government’s Nissan Leaf, one of the ten first such models being delivered in Europe.

The other nine Leafs were bought by the consortium behind Mobi.e, Portugal’s national electric mobility program. The Mobi.e concept has already been exported to Malta and Portugal is in talks with several other countries to implement its mobility project abroad.




READ MORE - Portugal PM tells electric vehicles will free us from oil addiction, drives off in a Nissan Leaf

Nissan delivers first ten Leafs in Portugal

Nissan is delivering this Wednesday in Lisbon the first ten Leafs in Portugal. Nine electric vehicles will be delivered to the consortium behind the national mobility program, the Mobi.e, formed by companies like Siemens, EDP, Critical Software, Efacec and Martifer, among others. The Portuguese Government will also get a Nissan Leaf to be used by the Prime-Minister José Sócrates on official acts. Sócrates is attending the cerimony.

Renault-Nissan is not an official partner listed by Mobi.e, also run by Novabase, INTELI, Rener Living Lab, CEIIA and Remobi, but is working with the Portuguese consortium on the development of a nationwide mobility network. Some 1.300 plug-in charging stations are expected to go online in Portugal until June 2011. The country has been chosen both by Renault and Nissan for extensive experimentation with electric vehicles over the last years.

The Mobi.e mobility concept has already been exported to Malta and Portugal is in talks with other countries to develop mobility networks based on the Portuguese, open model of business, national EV project.




READ MORE - Nissan delivers first ten Leafs in Portugal

Nissan entrega os primeiros dez Leafs em Portugal

A Nissan entrega esta quarta-feira os primeiros Leafs em Portugal. Dez carros eléctricos são hoje entregues em Lisboa às empresas do consórcio Mobi.e, responsável pelo programa nacional de mobilidade eléctrica. Siemens, Efacec e EDP são algumas das empresas que recebem o novo veículo eléctrico. Também o Governo de Portugal terá um Leaf para utilização do primeiro-ministro José Sócrates em actos oficiais.

A Renault-Nissan, não sendo um parceiro oficial do Mobi.e, colabora com o projecto português, tendo testado os seus modelos naquele país ao longo dos últimos anos.

O projecto Mobi.e foi recentemente exportado para Malta e Portugal está em conversações com outras nações para a implementação de soluções baseadas no conceito português de mobilidade eléctrica, que se destaca por um modelo de negócio aberto à participação de diferentes empresas e fornecedores. Até Junho de 2011, Portugal terá cerca de 1.300 pontos de recarregamento a funcionar em todo o país.

O Governo de Portugal oferece incentivos fiscais na compra de veículos eléctricos, sendo a dinamização da rede de mobilidade um dos objectivos inscritos no Orçamento do Estado para 2011, recentemente aprovado.

Fonte: JN




READ MORE - Nissan entrega os primeiros dez Leafs em Portugal

Monday, December 20, 2010

Electric vehicles are here, charging stations are not

From the New York Times: The Chevrolet Volt and Nissan Leaf were delivered to their first customers last week, and a small fleet of Think City electric vehicles were handed over to the State of Indiana for use in state parks. The plug-in E.V. has arrived, and it begs the question: will a public charging network be available to support the cars?

Led by Coulomb Technologies and Ecotality, the first home chargers are being installed. A robust and targeted public network is coming, but it is still very much a work in progress.

Read more at NYT...
READ MORE - Electric vehicles are here, charging stations are not

Saturday, December 18, 2010

MSNBC's piece on new car charging installation projects

MSNBC Environmental Entrepreneurs' piece on electrical mobility and plug-in charging systems in the United States:



Hat tip to Cars21's Arnaud de Coninck
READ MORE - MSNBC's piece on new car charging installation projects

Better Place's answer to range anxiety? 60 seconds battery swaps

It's the biggest fear for any EV driver. Where and when are you going to find a plug-in charging station? Whereas in countries like Portugal mobility networks are moving fast towards ubiquity with projects like Mobi.e, most nations are still far from it, with just a handful of charging stations in a few cities, with the most unusual service schedules (take San Francisco, for instance).

More than an electric vehicle's relatively high price, it's the lack of a comprehensive charging infrastructure, especially when gas stations are everywhere, that keeps many consumers from buying a Nissan Leaf or a Chevrolet Volt right now. It shouldn't be a problem if you have your own charging device at home. But it is. Today's electric vehicles get between 30 to 150 kms with a full battery. When it runs out, it can take up to four hours to fully recharge it. That means that going away for the weekend with your EV is still out of question, unless you don't mind stopping every other town for several hours.

This is why Better Place presents quite an interesting solution. Instead of plug-in stations, the California based company offers a network of battery switch stations that use a robotic system to switch depleted batteries for fully-charged ones, and charge the depleted batteries in inventory, so that there's a fully-charged battery ready to be installed, in a matter of seconds (60 second switches have been accomplished in tests) each time the vehicle arrives at a station. Kinda like changing your son's toy's AA battery, instead of recharging it every time it runs out.

The concept is already in practice in Israel, Denmark and Australia, though on a limited test basis. The US, Japan and China are the next targets for Better Place's internationalization strategy.

Sure, there are doubts about the practicability of this idea in the long run. Will everyone abdicate of being the owner of their own car's battery? What are the legal implications of that when, say, someone crashes their car and loses a battery? Will Better Place's closed model of business keep companies from developing better batteries with longer lives? And if and when they do develop them, what's the point of such a battery swap system? The German reflection group on mobility has said no to battery swaps, just as Volkswagen did. What does that mean for Better Place? Anyway, it is a brilliant idea, at least on paper, and it could well be a practical solution in these first years of the EV revolution.
READ MORE - Better Place's answer to range anxiety? 60 seconds battery swaps

Friday, December 17, 2010

Paris unveils electric car scheme

For a 12€ monthly fee, those 58% of Parisians who do not own a car will be able to use one of the 3,000 Bolloré Bluecars for short journeys around the city, starting in fall 2011. The self-service car scheme, named Autolib, is based on the famous Vélib cycle-sharing system that Paris developed in 2007 and other international cities are now adopting and adapting, or simply put, copying.

The electric, french-made four-seat Bluecar comes with its own GPS and is able to travel for 250 km (155 miles) between charges and has an estimated to speed of 130 kph (80 mph). Charging will take 4 hours at any of the 3,000 self-service plug-in stations being built across the city and its suburbs.

Drivers will pay 5€ for the first half an hour of use, 4€ for the next and 6€ for each subsequent 30-minute slot, to encourage short time trips. The prices will make the Bluecar an interesting alternative to Parisian taxis.

The mayor of Paris Bertrand Delanoe expects the plan to attract between 160,000 and 200,000 subscribers.

Source: The Guardian
READ MORE - Paris unveils electric car scheme

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Malta adopts Portugal's Mobi.e mobility solution

The governments of Portugal and Malta have signed an agreement this Wednesday for the implementation of the Mobi.e mobility network solution in the Mediterranean archipelago. Lisbon will provide Malta with technical solutions as well as legislative and fiscal advisory based on the Portuguese experience with Mobi.e.

Portugal is the first country in the world to implement a nationwide EV charging network. There are currently over one hundred plug-in stations across the territory, and the number will increase to 1.300 until June 2011. Mobi.e's network is the world's only user-focused, inter-operable smart grid to date open to every manufacturer, utility company and private operator, the project website states.

Malta will be the first European Union state to import the Portuguese mobility solution.
READ MORE - Malta adopts Portugal's Mobi.e mobility solution

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

UK releases list of EVs eligible for grants

From the Green Car Congress: The first nine electric drive cars to become eligible for the Plug-in Car Grant of up to £5,000 (US$7,900, €5,896) in the UK are: Mitsubishi iMiEV; smart fortwo electric drive; Peugeot iON; Citroen CZero; Nissan Leaf; Tata Vista EV; Toyota Prius Plug-in; Vauxhall Ampera and Chevrolet Volt. More will follow next year.

The grant will be available to motorists across the UK from 1 January 2011, reducing the cost of eligible cars by a quarter, up to a maximum of £5,000.

The Government is also encouraging a new network of electric vehicle recharging points in streets, car parks and commercial retail and leisure facilities as driving electric cars becomes a part of everyday life for pioneering British drivers. The successful bidding consortia in this second phase are based in: the Midlands; Greater Manchester; East of England; Scotland and Northern Ireland.

Read more...
READ MORE - UK releases list of EVs eligible for grants

Plan for Californian leadership on EVs and mobility is unveiled

Download the strategic plan document at EVCollaborative.Org

From the Associated Press: Low gas prices, weak batteries and a lack of cooperation between carmakers and utilities caused past efforts to introduce electric vehicles to fizzle. But this time, advocates say, an alliance of automakers, utilities and regulators are squarely behind an ambitious project to make California a national leader in accommodating electric vehicles for the mainstream car market. Their plan to build charging terminals in thousands of homes, office buildings, shopping malls and other sites within the next decade was released Monday.

The California Plug-In Electric Vehicle Collaborative touted its plan after the first-ever Nissan Leaf, a mass-market, all-electric car, was delivered to a customer in Redwood City, Calif., over the weekend. Meanwhile, the first 150 Chevrolet Volts left a Detroit auto plant on Monday and were expected to arrive in California showrooms in the coming days. Work is under way in the state to upgrade existing charging terminals and install thousands more to accommodate electric vehicles.

One company is even developing a network of "switching stations" where motorists can pull in and swap out their spent batteries. "All eyes are on California. It will host without question the largest rollout, the greatest numbers of EVs in the country, and it will also have the charge and switch infrastructure," said Jonathan Read, president of Ecotality, which will soon begin installing 1,600 public charging stations in San Diego and Los Angeles that resemble a giant iPod with a cord and plug attached.

The plan, which supporters believe could serve as a model for other states, outlines steps to get charging stations easily installed at homes and then in high-traffic public areas and apartment buildings to encourage drivers to switch from gasoline-powered vehicles to plug-in electric vehicles. The collaborative hopes to provide a positive experience for early owners of electric vehicles so they can spread the word. Its goal is to see a million plug-in hybrid and battery-powered cars in the state by 2020.

The plan recommends making installation of home charging stations affordable by offering rebates from the state and regional air quality districts. To further lower costs, the state could reduce registration fees for battery-powered cars, and utilities could offer cheaper charging rates during off-peak hours when there is less demand on the electric grid.

Read more...
READ MORE - Plan for Californian leadership on EVs and mobility is unveiled

Germany calls for global EV and mobility standards

The standard use of AC charging plug standard IEC 62196-2 Type 2 vehicle inlet, priority for wired charging over inductive charging and battery swapping and the standardisation of batteries at cellular level are some of the proposals made by the German National Platform for Electromobility in an interim report revealed by Cars21.

The working group led by Audi and RWE utility company also calls for increased cooperation with China, for a German-Chinese led standardisation process. The uniformisation of charging interfaces, charging stations and battery safety rules is identified by the group as the most important requirement for a successful market introduction of electric vehicles.

Read more at Cars21 and download the interim report (in German)
READ MORE - Germany calls for global EV and mobility standards

US still lack charging infrastructures

From NPR: The electric car is no longer just a project for smarty-pants MIT students. Here in the U.S., plug-in electric cars are now in showrooms and on the highways. What's missing, though, is a convenient way to refuel those cars with electricity.

That's what Russell Rankin has discovered. Rankin is an enthusiastic entrepreneur who has 13 electric vehicles charging up at the back of the Loews Hotel in Annapolis, Md. They're not quite cars, but they're more than golf carts — three rows of two seats, open on the sides, about 12 feet long. "Everybody kind of calls it a golf cart on steroids," says Rankin. "Or maybe something you'd see at Disney or something like that. It has a big bubble roof on it — it's very futuristic looking."

The vehicles are made by Global Electric Motorcars, owned by Chrysler. Rankin's company, eCruisers, uses them to squire people around the city for free. Advertising on the cars pays the freight.

After about 30 miles, the cars come back to recharge. "Our vehicles just run off a regular household outlet," Rankin says. "We have a regular three-pronged plug that you'd have on any household appliance." So that part is easy. The hard part is keeping cars charged when they're needed.

Read more...
READ MORE - US still lack charging infrastructures

Monday, December 13, 2010

Azores: Workshop on Electric Mobility, December 16

The University of the Azores at Angra do Heroísmo, Portugal, is hosting a workshop on electric mobility Thursday, 16, where the intermediate results of the Green Island project will be presented, and the Electric Mobility Project Proconvergência Azores will be launched. Click for info and registration.
READ MORE - Azores: Workshop on Electric Mobility, December 16

Cars21: Germany's electricity grid ready for millions of EVs

From Cars21: An interim report of the National Electromobility Platform concludes that Germany’s grid is ready for electric vehicles. Only upgrades in some regions are needed to handle far more than the 1 million EVs on the street forecasted for 2020.

As part of the National Electromobility Platform (NEP), the working group "Charging Infrastructure and Network Integration" is chaired by experts from energy service provider E.ON AG and Siemens and submitted their key findings to the German federal government recently. The report points out that the German government’s smart grid plans, including the integration of up to 1 million electric cars by 2020, will generally not pose a problem for the power grid. Only in cases of a locally high density of electric cars could isolated segments of the grid be overloaded and require upgrading.

Read more (includes download links for the reports in German)...
READ MORE - Cars21: Germany's electricity grid ready for millions of EVs

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