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		EV rollout will require huge investments in strained U.S. power grids
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		 [March 05, 2021]  By 
		Nichola Groom and Tina Bellon 
 (Reuters) - During several days of brutal cold in Texas, the city of 
		Austin saw its fleet of 12 new electric buses rendered inoperative by a 
		statewide power outage. That problem will be magnified next year, when 
		officials plan to start purchasing electric-powered vehicles 
		exclusively.
 
 The city's transit agency has budgeted $650 million over 20 years for 
		electric buses and a charging facility for 187 such vehicles. But 
		officials are still trying to solve the dilemma of power interruptions 
		like the Texas freeze.
 
 "Redundancy and resiliency when it comes to power is something we have 
		long understood will be an issue," said Capitol Metro spokeswoman Jenna 
		Maxfield.
 
 Austin's predicament highlights the challenges facing governments, 
		utilities and auto manufacturers as they respond to climate change. More 
		electric cars will require both charging infrastructure and much greater 
		electric-grid capacity. Utilities and power generators will have to 
		invest billions of dollars creating that additional capacity while also 
		facing the challenge of replacing fossil fuels with renewable energy 
		sources.
 
 Extreme weather events add additional layers of difficulty.
 
		
		 
		
 "Reliability keeps you awake," California Energy Commission member Siva 
		Gunda said in an interview.
 
 Rolling blackouts during a California heat wave last year prompted the 
		state to direct its utilities to procure emergency generating capacity 
		for this summer and to reform its planning for reserve power.
 
 The state plans an aggressive phase-out of sales of gas- and 
		diesel-powered cars and trucks by 2035 - which, if achieved, would 
		require vast increases in electric grid capacity. (For a graphic on the 
		extra power that will be needed for electric cars, click https://tmsnrt.rs/3rhyX4S 
		)
 
 Graphic: Estimated U.S. capacity if 66% of all cars are EVs by 2050 - 
		https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-WEATHER/GRIDS-AUTOS/qzjvqgzxmvx/chart.png
 
 The power and transport sectors combined make up more than half of U.S. 
		greenhouse gas emissions. Their simultaneous greening is considered 
		critical for the United States - the world's second-largest emitter 
		behind China - to meet its obligations under an international accord to 
		address global warming. (For a graphic on the energy sources that fuel 
		U.S. transportation now, click https://tmsnrt.rs/387haFR )
 
 Graphic: Fossil fuels power the U.S. transportation sector - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-WEATHER/GRID-AUTOS/xklpyowgqpg/chart.png
 
 The goal is to power electric cars with renewable energy rather than the 
		coal and natural gas that currently dominate the U.S. power supply. To 
		realize that vision, electricity from intermittent sources like wind and 
		solar will need to be stored, probably through battery technology, so 
		that cars can charge overnight or at other times when supply outstrips 
		demand.
 
 DOUBLING POWER CAPACITY
 
 A model utility with two to three million customers would need to invest 
		between $1,700 and $5,800 in grid upgrades per EV through 2030, 
		according to Boston Consulting Group. Assuming 40 million EVs on the 
		road, that investment could reach $200 billion.
 
 So far, investor-owned companies have plans approved for just $2.6 
		billion in charging programs and projects, according to trade group 
		Edison Electric Institute.
 
 "The electrification of the transportation sector will catch most 
		utilities a little bit off guard," said Ben Kroposki, director of the 
		Power Systems Engineering Center at the National Renewable Energy 
		Laboratory (NREL).
 
 The organization estimates that, by 2050, the electrification of 
		transportation and other sectors will require a doubling of U.S. 
		generation capacity.
 
 If not managed carefully, the needed investments could saddle consumers 
		with higher energy bills, according to a report last month by 
		California’s utility regulator. Another challenge: lower-income 
		customers often can't afford to make the upfront investment in electric 
		cars, home batteries and rooftop solar systems that could save them 
		money in the long term.
 
 'CHICKEN AND EGG' PROBLEMS
 
 Utilities are embracing EV sales growth as both a promising new source 
		of revenue and an opportunity to use excess wind and solar power 
		generated at very windy or sunny times when supply exceeds demand.
 
 Investments in both the grid and charging infrastructure that are 
		recovered from ratepayers could add between $3 billion and $10 billion 
		in cumulative cash flow to the average utility through 2030, according 
		to Boston Consulting Group. The forecast also includes potential 
		revenues from new products outside of utilities' regulated businesses, 
		such as customer fleet routing or charging station maintenance.
 
 The revenue opportunity is still nascent, however, with EVs making up 
		less than 2% of all vehicles registered in the United States. And 
		utilities must invest in infrastructure now for consumers to feel secure 
		in their purchase of an EV, said Emily Fisher, general counsel of 
		utility trade group Edison Electric Institute.
 
		
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			A crew member works to restore 5G following an unprecedented winter 
			storm in Houston, Texas, U.S., March 3, 2021. REUTERS/Callaghan 
			O'Hare/File Photo 
            
			 
"There is definitely a chicken-and-egg situation with charging infrastructure," 
she said. 
AUTOMAKERS BET BIG ON EVs
 Major U.S. automakers General Motors and Ford have announced large investments 
in EV development to keep pace with electric-car pioneer Tesla Inc and to 
prepare for the prospect of tougher emissions regulations. EV share could grow 
to 15% by 2030, according to U.S. Department of Energy forecasts.
 
 The electricity to power all those cars is expected to come primarily from 
renewable energy sources and natural gas, according to NREL. Even if natural gas 
generation increases to support electrified transportation, overall emissions 
are projected to decline, the organization said.
 
 Large new investments may pose difficulties for utilities already experiencing 
weather-related problems. In Texas, many of the companies that would be making 
those investments face a financial crisis stemming from last month’s cold snap. 
Utilities and power marketers face billions of dollars in blackout-related 
charges, and several have filed for bankruptcy.
 
CHARGING UP
 Daimler Trucks, the world's biggest maker of heavy-duty haulers, plans to sell 
electric vehicles in Europe, North America and Japan by next year. But the 
company is grappling with how to charge what will one day become hundreds of 
thousands of battery-powered trucks, said Daimler Trucks chairman Martin Daum.
 
 The need for massive investments in grid infrastructure and charging stations 
"cannot be underestimated," Daum said.
 
 Ford Chief Executive Jim Farley last week called on U.S. government leaders to 
support EV sales with favorable regulation and subsidies for the production of 
batteries and charging infrastructure.
 
But Robert Barrosa, senior director at Volkswagen AG's Electrify America, which 
is building out fast-charging stations throughout the nation, said the gradual 
pace of EV adoption will allow utilities to adapt. 
 
 "We're not in a doom-and-gloom situation," Barrosa said. "We're not going to 80% 
battery electric sales overnight...it will be a natural transition."
 
 Barrosa said U.S. energy consumption decreases over the last 20 years, due to 
efficiency gains in appliances and the transportation sector, mean that the U.S. 
power system has enough established capacity to support EV growth without the 
immediate need for big investments. (For a graphic on U.S. power generation and 
consumption, click https://tmsnrt.rs/3e5f6SH)
 
 Graphic: The U.S. is generating more electricity than it consumes - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-WEATHER/GRID-AUTOS/qmyvmwenyvr/chart.png
 
 Utility Xcel Energy said EV adoption would likely not require capacity additions 
until after 2030, and that near-term investments would mainly be in distribution 
systems. The company is planning to accommodate 1.5 million electric vehicles in 
its Midwest and Western service territories by 2030, about 30 times more than 
its current capability.
 
 The utility in December received approval to spend $110 million on electric 
vehicle charging infrastructure in Colorado, which passed a law in 2019 
requiring utilities to develop plans for widespread transportation 
electrification. The plan is expected to add 65 cents a month to residential 
customer bills.
 
 Electric vehicles - especially commercial ones with large batteries - can help 
stabilize the grid in the long run by feeding power back into the system during 
times of peak demand, using chargers that allow electricity to flow in both 
directions. Passenger cars that sit idle most of the day could one day earn 
money by feeding power back into the grid with the help of bi-directional 
chargers, utilities predict.
 
 During the Texas outages, some Twitter users said they used their electric 
vehicles to power their homes. But wider applications of such vehicle-to-grid 
technology would require larger infrastructure changes and utility involvement.
 
 "Planning is going to be more sophisticated," said Ryan Popple, co-founder of 
Proterra, which produced some of Austin's electric buses. "And as 
vehicle-to-grid becomes more common with our commercial fleets, it's actually 
going to make the overall technology even more attractive."
 
 (Reporting by Nichola Groom and Tina Bellon; editing by David Gaffen and Brian 
Thevenot)
 
				 
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