Texas Dan
Well-known member
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- #1
$7.5B earmarked for EV infrastructure that is include in the infrastructure bill congress just passed doesn't sound like a lot when you consider how much EV infrastructure VW has paid for with the $1B they have spent so far on the Diesel-Gate reparations and considering how woefully inadequate the EV charging infrastructure still is. But the $7.5B from congress is just seed money. The money actually spent on EV infrastructure could easily double or triple that number with state and local government, public utility and private sector matching funds.
Even with $20B+ that's still not going to be enough to pay for the EV infrastructure required for a fully transitioned EV economy. I'm hoping for at least DC fast chargers along all Interstates and most major federal and state highways. I think this would be perfectly adequate for most people that can L2 home charge but would still leave people that live in apartments or hotels in rural areas or towns with no DCFCs significant charging challenges.
My biggest regret about the infrastructure bill is that it's going to take years to see the start of EV infrastructure promised by the bill. Planning, appropriating funds, permitting, constructing and commissioning of DCFCs is a long complicated process and congress will probably stretch out the spending of it's money for ten years. Still we should start seeing new chargers paid for by the bill about the time some of the most important EVs of our time, like the F150L, Expedition EV, Silverado EV, Tahoe EV, etc., start showing up on dealer lots.
Even with $20B+ that's still not going to be enough to pay for the EV infrastructure required for a fully transitioned EV economy. I'm hoping for at least DC fast chargers along all Interstates and most major federal and state highways. I think this would be perfectly adequate for most people that can L2 home charge but would still leave people that live in apartments or hotels in rural areas or towns with no DCFCs significant charging challenges.
My biggest regret about the infrastructure bill is that it's going to take years to see the start of EV infrastructure promised by the bill. Planning, appropriating funds, permitting, constructing and commissioning of DCFCs is a long complicated process and congress will probably stretch out the spending of it's money for ten years. Still we should start seeing new chargers paid for by the bill about the time some of the most important EVs of our time, like the F150L, Expedition EV, Silverado EV, Tahoe EV, etc., start showing up on dealer lots.
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