UPDATE: Electric vehicles (EVs) — Don’t charge ahead without the supporting infrastructure
Update - February 12, 2025: The Department of Transportation has decided to review the policies of the NEVI Formula Program, mentioned in the article originally published in February 2023, and rescinded guidance related to the program. The approval of all State Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Deployment plans for all fiscal years has been suspended. The new administration is reevaluating and is not abandoning the NEVI Program at this time.
Below is the remainder of the original article:
Before hastily transitioning to EVs, ensure you can meet your charging and parking needs. EVs are simultaneously in demand from commercial motor carriers and private passenger vehicle owners.
Motor carriers are motivated by:
- State and federal financial incentives,
- Customer-focus on their carriers using clean energy, and
- High fossil-fuel costs.
However, American Transportation Research Institute's (ATRI) December 2022 study "Charging Infrastructure Challenges for the US Electrical Fleet" identified three EV infrastructure challenges.
EV production concerns is one that has been in the news.
However, we will explore two of the lesser know issues:
- The lack of electricity generation capacity to meet demand, and
- Parking space for truck charging.
These are barriers to overcome well before EVs are purchased.
Electricity infrastructure and planning
Before any transition to EVs, contact the electric utility provider(s). An inadequate supply of electricity at the needed times of day and locations can stop the best-laid plans.
Be aware that ATRI's December 2022 study found that:
- Electrification of all vehicles in the U.S. will take a significant increase in capacity. The country's current electricity generation capacity is only:
- 14 percent for all freight trucks, and within this, 10.6 percent for long-haul trucks.
- 26.3 percent for light-duty vehicles (passenger cars and trucks).
- 40.3 percent for all vehicles.
• Individual states will require an increase of 28 to 63 percent of today's energy generation to meet vehicle travel needs.
Given the nationwide shortfall, an early question to answer is:
Will power from the respective utilities support our planned charging needs?
Building infrastructure and permit acquisition may have significant lead times and affect your plan. If you expect to add charging stations at your terminal(s), understand how each municipality will accommodate permits and a surge in businesses with higher electricity needs.
To assess charging needs, take these steps:
- Determine how many EVs will be implemented over what timeframe, considering the availability of OEM delivery capability and reliable charging.
- Assess whether you will purchase or lease EVs and build or lease charging capacity.
- Conduct a preliminary operational review based on at least these questions:
- Which routes or work applications can be supported by the EV range considering urban versus rural travel, weather, and weight hauled?
- Where will charging occur, and at what times of the day?
- Is there sufficient parking at these locations?
- Is there charging compatibility between your vehicles?
EV charging infrastructure should get a boost from the Federal Highway Administration's (FHWA) National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) Formula program published in the Federal Register on February 28, 2023. NEVI set minimum standards for any federally funded construction of EV charging projects. The NEVI Formula Program aims to create "a convenient, affordable, reliable, and equitable network of chargers throughout the country."
The law allocates $5 billion over five years for the NEVI program to be divided by all states. There is also a separate competitive grant program of $2.5 billion to help reach the Biden administration’s goal of deploying 500,000 EV charging stations by 2030.
Details on the NEVI formula program can be viewed by clicking on this link: NEVI
Commercial truck parking availability to worsen
Truck parking is always near the top of the list of commercial driver concerns. EV charging needs will increase parking space demand.
ATRI's study found:
- "Using today's truck and charging requirements, more chargers are needed than there are parking spaces."
- "Regardless of advances in battery capacity or charge rates, Battery Electric Vehicle (BEV) charging will be limited by hours-of-service and parking availability."
Parking is a concern if you plan to charge trucks en route at public facilities. Assess every charging location for parking, not just your terminals.
Keys to remember: Before transitioning to EVs, develop a charging plan with your utility provider. And don't forget to assess parking needs at your projected charging locations.