According to an article in my newspaper today, written by George Avalos of the
Bay Area News Group, titled (appropriately) "PG&E has plan to charge autos - and consumers". The story is that our electric company, Pacific, Gas and Electric (AKA Pacific, Gas and Extortion) has applied to the state PUC to authorize the construction of 25,000 new EV charging stations within their service area in Northern California. (The entire state currently has about 6000 charging stations.) The stations would be located all over the place, including large apartment buildings, all sorts of businesses and all of the expected public locations, streets, parking lots, public buildings, parks, etc. etc. The entire program would cost $654 million, of which $551 million is the estimated capital cost of the charging stations. The program would be funded by a 70 cent increase in the average monthly residential electric rate.
It should be no surprise that the state's rate payer advocates have questioned placing the burden of the program on residential customers. Mark Toney of TURN says that "We are very skeptical about the value of investing so much ratepayer money and betting it all on electric vehicles".
It should also be no surprise that Charge-Point is not too happy about the idea, either. While they support the concept of electric utility companies getting into the charging station arena, they are concerned that PG&E's approach "could stifle competition", because the utility wants the PUC to authorize it to wield wide-ranging control over the design of the physical facilities and the network support services. Charge-Point says that "PG&E wants to pick the hardware vendor, the network services vendor, and we don't' think that's fair", says Pasquale Romano, CEO of Charge-Point.
This is going to be an interesting public discussion, especially as just about everyone in the state hates the CA PUC right now and believes they are in the pocket of PG&E (which apparently they are, according to a ton of leaked emails between the two organizations).