White House welcomes Tesla to take advantage of federal dollars for
chargers
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[June 10, 2023] By
Jarrett Renshaw and Abhirup Roy
(Reuters) - The White House on Friday said electric-vehicle charging
stations using Tesla standard plugs would be eligible for billions of
dollars in federal subsidies as long as they included the U.S. charging
standard connection, CCS, as well.
The statement follows separate announcements by U.S. automakers Ford
Motor and General Motors that they were adopting the Tesla model of
charging, known as the North American Charging Standard (NACS). The
moves shake up a charging industry that looked like it was drifting
toward the rival CCS connection, with the help of federal subsidies.
This is the first time the Biden administration has directly connected
Tesla to its efforts to spend up to $7.5 billion to build new,
high-speed chargers on some 7,500 miles of the nation's busiest
highways.
Tesla shares rose 4.1%. Analysts said the Ford and GM news was a big win
that could make Tesla Superchargers an industry standard in the United
States.
GM and Ford shares closed up 1.1% and 1.3%, respectively.
But shares in EV charging firms such as ChargePoint, EVgo and Blink
Charging fell 11%-13% as the alliance between the three automakers
raised questions about their fate. They were flat after hours.
Some of them said on Friday that they would work to adapt to the Tesla
standard.
"Earlier this year, we developed minimum standards to ensure publicly
funded EV charging is accessible, reliable, and affordable for all
drivers, and we required interoperability to promote competition," White
House spokesperson Robyn Patterson said in statement to Reuters. "Those
standards give flexibility for adding both CCS and NACS, as long as
drivers can count on a minimum of CCS."
Patterson said the goal is for every car to be able to use every
publicly funded charger. "More drivers having access to more
high-quality charging – including Tesla Superchargers – is a step
forward."
The statement did not say whether it was enough for Tesla to provide a
CCS adapter to connect to charging ports at non-Tesla chargers.
Earlier this year, the administration welcomed Tesla's decision to open
up its charging network to competitors but stopped short of discussing
how the company would be involved in its charging efforts.
Most large global automakers use the CCS network in the United States,
including Volkswagen, Hyundai Motor and Kia.
A fight between competing standards will raise costs for consumers and
vendors, said Oleg Logvinov, chief executive of EV charging parts
supplier IoTecha.
Logvinov, who is also the president of CharIN North America, an industry
body that promotes CCS, said the organization was backing CCS because it
had worked more than a decade with multiple vendors and Tesla's
technology was not as tested.
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Tesla charging stations are pictured in
a parking lot in Shanghai, China March 13, 2021. Picture taken March
13, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song
INDUSTRY SHAKEUP
"What's the cost of having all those CCS ports that are being used
by the minority in the market? What's the opportunity cost of that?"
said Sam Houston, senior vehicles analyst at nonprofit science
advocacy group Union of Concerned Scientists.
Tesla's network is the largest for fast charging in the United
States.
The partnership among three of the biggest U.S. automakers ensures
that more than 60% of the country's EV market can NACS.
"Whether other charge point systems disappear in the same way that
Betamax video tapes disappeared in the 1980s is likely to depend on
policymakers," said Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ
Bell. "But at the moment Tesla is way ahead of the pack and the gap
is widening."
A spokesperson for Blink said the company welcomed "the opportunity
to work with Tesla on interoperability with cables and connections."
EVgo Chief Commercial Officer Jonathan Levy said the company would
continue to "serve all EV drivers no matter what fast charging
connector they use" and was working with NACS suppliers to meet
drivers' needs.
ABB e-mobility North America, a big maker of EV chargers that
supplies operators, fleets and retailers, said it will be offering a
NACS connector option to its products that it is now designing and
testing.
"We've been working with Tesla and collaborating on this. They've
been very helpful," said Asaf Nagler, a senior executive at the
company, a unit of the Swiss industrial firm ABB.
ChargePoint was not immediately available for comment.
Smaller EV companies including Rivian and Lucid did not immediately
respond to requests for comment. Their shares closed down just over
1%.
Tesla has been testing the use of CCS connectors to allow non-Tesla
vehicles to use its Superchargers.
Last week, the Biden administration updated its guidelines to say
people will receive federal subsidies to buy proprietary adapters if
they are compatible with a permanently attached CCS connector,
potentially making Tesla's adapters eligible for the grant.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in Philadelphia and Abhirup Roy in San
Francisco; Additional reporting by Hyunjoo Jin and Chavi Mehta and
Bhanvi Satija in Bengaluru; Writing by Sayantani Ghosh; Editing by
David Gaffen, Peter Henderson and Matthew Lewis)
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