(ಠ_ಠ)
2014-11-18 00:45:00 UTC
Time to instruct your stock broker to invest your money in this GREEN alternative.
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CBC News Posted: Nov 17, 2014
Electric vehicles move closer to widespread use, experts say
New high-speed charging station, vehicle-to-grid technology may increase
consumer demand
[A new level 3 electric vehicle charging station was opened this month by
PowerStream in the Toronto suburb of Vaughan.]
Loading Image...
A new free high-speed charging station north of Toronto may be a sign that the
barriers to widespread adoption of electric vehicles in Canada are being
dismantled.
"I expect that within the next five to 10 years, we'll have moved significantly
along [on] some of them. And we'll continue to move forward, because the
electrified vehicle, I think, is something that's here," says Charlotte Yates,
dean of social sciences at McMaster University in Hamilton.
Electric car drivers hope more charging stations will reduce 'range anxiety'
Yates, who is currently working on a $2.1-million study on the effect of public
policy on Canada's automotive industry, says public infrastructure is the key.
"What infrastructure do we need for people who own electric vehicles where they
know it's easy to charge them, it's quick to charge them, there are lots of
spots to charge them, not only within the city, but perhaps along the highway?"
she asks.
Power me up
Enter PowerStream, a community-owned energy company that provides power and
services to more than 370,000 customers in communities north of Toronto.
PowerStream opened a new electric vehicle charging station this month in
Vaughan, a suburb of Toronto. The charger is located in the parking lot of
PowerStream's headquarters, just off the busy Highway 400, a key commuter
highway and route to Ontario's cottage country.
What's so special about this station? Well, to start with, it's a level 3
charging unit.
'Maybe when the power goes out or maybe when electricity prices are high,
you can use your electric vehicle as an alternative in order to charge your
home, to provide power to your home.'- Martin Rovers, director of energy
services at PowerStream
That means it's capable of powering up most electric cars to an 80 per cent
charge in little more than 15 minutes.
"You drive up on your way, 15 minutes later you're moving on again," says
Martin Rovers, director of energy services at PowerStream.
By our count, including PowerStream's new unit, there are only about two dozen
level 3 chargers in all of Canada.
Unless you can afford to shell out upwards of $80,000 for a Tesla, which has
its own proprietary high-speed charging system, most electric cars have been
forced to 'fuel up' at the
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more common level 2 chargers, which can take up to four hours.
If you power up using a level 1 charger, like you might have in your home, it
can take more than a day.
Because no one wants to have to wait more than 24 hours if their car runs out
of battery power, electric cars have been mostly used by commuters going a
fixed distance from home to work and back again.
Any longer trips are enough to induce range anxiety — or the fear of running
out of battery power prior to reaching your destination — in even the most
ardent of electric vehicle proponents.
"One of the barriers that we've seen to adoption of electric vehicles is that
range-anxiety issue," says Rovers. "This relieves that."
The electricity at PowerStream's level 3 charging station is free.
Power up your home
PowerStream has also introduced what it says is the first commercial
vehicle-to-grid (V2G) power supply system in North America.
The system allows electric vehicles to send power from the car's battery back
into the grid.
"Maybe when the power goes out, or maybe when electricity prices are high, you
can use your electric vehicle as an alternative in order to charge your home,
to provide power to your home," Rovers says.
Japan set up a V2G system to use electric cars as emergency generators after
the tsunami and earthquake in 2011.
Proponents of electric vehicles say these types of developments show it's never
been easier to own an EV.
"I think it's the perfect time to buy it," says Cara Clairman, Nissan Leaf
owner and president and CEO of Plug and Drive, a non-profit organization
dedicated to accelerating the adoption of electric cars.
Clairman says she pays about one-sixth the amount in fuel costs for her zero
emission EV compared to a gas-powered vehicle.
"You're now in a situation where the infrastructure has grown quite
substantially, so there's lots of places to charge. Actually, we maintain an
amazing map with all kinds of charging stations and it's available on the CAA
app, so you can get it on your phone and find out where to charge your car.
It's really that easy."
Slow to get going
The map does show hundreds, perhaps even thousands of level 2 charging stations
in Canada. But almost all of those will take four hours to charge a car.
That, plus a higher cost for many electric vehicles, concern about battery life
in cold climates and — more recently — cheaper gasoline have held back consumer
demand for electric vehicles, says McMaster's Yates.
"The bulk of electrified cars in Canada at the moment are owned as part of
fleets as opposed to individual owners. Although there are a growing number of
individual owners," she said.
In fact, Nissan says sales of its EV, the Leaf, were up 130 per cent in the
U.S. in 2013. And Nissan Canada says sales of the Leaf in Canada are set to
double this year.
The Leaf starts at $31,798 Cdn, less a rebate of up to $8,500 in provincial
incentives.
But electric vehicles also face competition from another clean fuel source:
hydrogen.
Toyota has just announced the name of its fuel cell vehicle (FCV), the Mirai,
which means future in Japanese.
Toyota is betting the future is hydrogen, announcing it is building a network
of hydrogen stations in the northeastern U.S. to support its new car.
The Mirai is expected to go on sale in North America in 2016 at a price of
around $69,000 US.
Hydrogen vehicles are about half as energy efficient as electric, but they have
one key advantage: refuelling takes only about five minutes.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
CBC News Posted: Nov 17, 2014
Electric vehicles move closer to widespread use, experts say
New high-speed charging station, vehicle-to-grid technology may increase
consumer demand
[A new level 3 electric vehicle charging station was opened this month by
PowerStream in the Toronto suburb of Vaughan.]
Loading Image...
A new free high-speed charging station north of Toronto may be a sign that the
barriers to widespread adoption of electric vehicles in Canada are being
dismantled.
"I expect that within the next five to 10 years, we'll have moved significantly
along [on] some of them. And we'll continue to move forward, because the
electrified vehicle, I think, is something that's here," says Charlotte Yates,
dean of social sciences at McMaster University in Hamilton.
Electric car drivers hope more charging stations will reduce 'range anxiety'
Yates, who is currently working on a $2.1-million study on the effect of public
policy on Canada's automotive industry, says public infrastructure is the key.
"What infrastructure do we need for people who own electric vehicles where they
know it's easy to charge them, it's quick to charge them, there are lots of
spots to charge them, not only within the city, but perhaps along the highway?"
she asks.
Power me up
Enter PowerStream, a community-owned energy company that provides power and
services to more than 370,000 customers in communities north of Toronto.
PowerStream opened a new electric vehicle charging station this month in
Vaughan, a suburb of Toronto. The charger is located in the parking lot of
PowerStream's headquarters, just off the busy Highway 400, a key commuter
highway and route to Ontario's cottage country.
What's so special about this station? Well, to start with, it's a level 3
charging unit.
'Maybe when the power goes out or maybe when electricity prices are high,
you can use your electric vehicle as an alternative in order to charge your
home, to provide power to your home.'- Martin Rovers, director of energy
services at PowerStream
That means it's capable of powering up most electric cars to an 80 per cent
charge in little more than 15 minutes.
"You drive up on your way, 15 minutes later you're moving on again," says
Martin Rovers, director of energy services at PowerStream.
By our count, including PowerStream's new unit, there are only about two dozen
level 3 chargers in all of Canada.
Unless you can afford to shell out upwards of $80,000 for a Tesla, which has
its own proprietary high-speed charging system, most electric cars have been
forced to 'fuel up' at the
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
more common level 2 chargers, which can take up to four hours.
If you power up using a level 1 charger, like you might have in your home, it
can take more than a day.
Because no one wants to have to wait more than 24 hours if their car runs out
of battery power, electric cars have been mostly used by commuters going a
fixed distance from home to work and back again.
Any longer trips are enough to induce range anxiety — or the fear of running
out of battery power prior to reaching your destination — in even the most
ardent of electric vehicle proponents.
"One of the barriers that we've seen to adoption of electric vehicles is that
range-anxiety issue," says Rovers. "This relieves that."
The electricity at PowerStream's level 3 charging station is free.
Power up your home
PowerStream has also introduced what it says is the first commercial
vehicle-to-grid (V2G) power supply system in North America.
The system allows electric vehicles to send power from the car's battery back
into the grid.
"Maybe when the power goes out, or maybe when electricity prices are high, you
can use your electric vehicle as an alternative in order to charge your home,
to provide power to your home," Rovers says.
Japan set up a V2G system to use electric cars as emergency generators after
the tsunami and earthquake in 2011.
Proponents of electric vehicles say these types of developments show it's never
been easier to own an EV.
"I think it's the perfect time to buy it," says Cara Clairman, Nissan Leaf
owner and president and CEO of Plug and Drive, a non-profit organization
dedicated to accelerating the adoption of electric cars.
Clairman says she pays about one-sixth the amount in fuel costs for her zero
emission EV compared to a gas-powered vehicle.
"You're now in a situation where the infrastructure has grown quite
substantially, so there's lots of places to charge. Actually, we maintain an
amazing map with all kinds of charging stations and it's available on the CAA
app, so you can get it on your phone and find out where to charge your car.
It's really that easy."
Slow to get going
The map does show hundreds, perhaps even thousands of level 2 charging stations
in Canada. But almost all of those will take four hours to charge a car.
That, plus a higher cost for many electric vehicles, concern about battery life
in cold climates and — more recently — cheaper gasoline have held back consumer
demand for electric vehicles, says McMaster's Yates.
"The bulk of electrified cars in Canada at the moment are owned as part of
fleets as opposed to individual owners. Although there are a growing number of
individual owners," she said.
In fact, Nissan says sales of its EV, the Leaf, were up 130 per cent in the
U.S. in 2013. And Nissan Canada says sales of the Leaf in Canada are set to
double this year.
The Leaf starts at $31,798 Cdn, less a rebate of up to $8,500 in provincial
incentives.
But electric vehicles also face competition from another clean fuel source:
hydrogen.
Toyota has just announced the name of its fuel cell vehicle (FCV), the Mirai,
which means future in Japanese.
Toyota is betting the future is hydrogen, announcing it is building a network
of hydrogen stations in the northeastern U.S. to support its new car.
The Mirai is expected to go on sale in North America in 2016 at a price of
around $69,000 US.
Hydrogen vehicles are about half as energy efficient as electric, but they have
one key advantage: refuelling takes only about five minutes.