Australia is running out of electricity to charge electric cars, and they’re only 0.9% of cars on the road

EV fast charging is not so fast.

By Jo Nova

No one saw this car crash coming?

EV’s represent just 0.9% of all cars on the road in Australia but plans to install fast chargers are already grinding to a crawl. Last year, Ampol was planning to build 180 EV charging bays by the end of the year. Instead it’s proved difficult to even reach half that target. Eight months after they were supposed to have 180 in action they’ve reached 92.

Just throw money…

A mere 3 weeks ago Ampol announced that thanks to a $100 million dollar grant from the Australian government they would install more than 200 new fast chargers at Ampols national network of petrol stations this year. But presumably after making a few phone calls they’ve realized it’s not going to happen. (You’d think they might have made the calls before putting out the press release, and the Minister might have phoned a friend before tossing $100 million out?)

Ben Potter and Simon Evans, Australian Financial Review

Ampol, one of the country’s largest petrol retailers, has dialled back plans to triple the number of electric vehicle chargers because of power grid limitations in a blow to government hopes of pushing motorists towards cleaner cars in big numbers by 2030.

The company’s chief executive, Matt Halliday, said it would not be possible to expand the number of charging bays from 92 to 300 by the end of this year because of difficulties connecting chargers to the grid which is already struggling to cope with an influx of renewable energy generation.

In March, Energy Minister Chris Bowen said the government would spend $60 million helping car dealerships install chargers on sales lots.

[As] much as we spend a lot of time talking about generation, firming and transmission infrastructure, the last mile distribution grid is not really built for large-scale electrification, despite the best will that the players have to try and make it happen,” Mr Halliday added. “There are a lot of constraints that need to be worked through.”

These people are just not good with numbers. A fast charger needs 300 kilowatts, and if there are three car charging spaces in a row, that’s a major load that our low voltage lines simply can’t bear. In order to get the local distribution networks upgraded the wait times to connect the chargers can be as long as two years.

Not to mention that we’re supposedly aiming to transform the car market so most new cars sold will be electric in a mere five years or so, while we supposedly try to shut down some cheap reliable coal plants.

At the moment most EVs charging overnight are probably burning more fossil fuels than petrol cars do. The EV revolution in Australia (should it happen) would rampantly increase our carbon dioxide emissions. But who cares, right? It was never about CO2.

ht Dave of Cooyal in Oz, and CO2 Lover

 

0 out of 10 based on 0 rating

via JoNova

https://ift.tt/ZA8C3sT

August 21, 2024 at 03:36PM

2 thoughts on “Australia is running out of electricity to charge electric cars, and they’re only 0.9% of cars on the road”

  1. This slowdown could have implications beyond Ampol. It signals that Australia needs a more unified approach to supporting EV infrastructure, including incentives for private investment and streamlined processes for site approvals. While the overall subaru sambar parts market share in the country is currently small, the trajectory for growth is clear, and preparing the groundwork for widespread adoption is essential.

    Like

  2. A mere 3 weeks ago Ampol announced that thanks to a $100 million dollar grant from the Australian government they would install more than of petrol stations this year. But presumably after making a few phone calls they’ve realized it’s not going to happen. (You’d think they might have made the calls before putting out the press release, and the Minister might have phoned a friend before tossing $100 million out?)

    Like

Leave a reply to lisa Cancel reply