Jan 13 2010

Energy executive: Power grids need upgrades to handle plug-in cars

Published by Boulderganic at 2:31 pm under Sustainability

By Brent Snavely

Detroit Free Press

(MCT)

DETROIT — Preparing America’s neighborhoods to handle the additional power load that electric vehicles are expected to require is among the challenges facing the utility and automotive industries as plug-in electric vehicles are introduced, DTE Energy Chairman Tony Earley said Wednesday.

Almost every major automaker plans to introduce an electric car in the next three years, even though many questions about the technology remain.

Early said nation’s power plants and major power lines are capable of providing adequate electricity to meet the additional demand that plug-in electric vehicles for the foreseeable future. But in many cases, the power lines in neighborhoods will need to be upgraded.

With most plug-in electric vehicles expected to cost $40,000 or more, “We can pretty much guess what neighborhoods are going to buy these vehicles. It’s going to be upper-end neighborhoods,” Earley said during a panel discussion on electric vehicles in Detroit hosted by Inforum.

That means that the owners of plug-in electric vehicles will live in concentrated areas.

“And so the local infrastructure will really be a challenge,” Earley said. “You will see breakers trip, and you will see transformers burn out.”

In addition to that challenge, panelists from GM, Chrysler and Ford acknowledged that many other challenges exist, including finding ways to reduce the cost of the lithium-ion batteries that will power electric vehicles and the need for common standards for the size of the plug.

Still, a consensus emerged among panelists that all of those problems can be solved.

In fact, this year General Motors plans to introduce the extended-range Chevrolet Volt and Ford Motor plans to introduce an electric version of its Transit Connect commercial van.

“We’ve invested about $700 million in eight different facilities to support the Volt alone, including our battery assembly plant in Brownstown, (Mich.,)” said Michael Robinson, vice president for environment, energy and safety for GM.

“This is an idea whose time has come, and the technology is emerging to match it,” Earley said.

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(c) 2010, Detroit Free Press.

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2 responses so far

2 Responses to “Energy executive: Power grids need upgrades to handle plug-in cars”

  1. Henery Schafferon 13 Jan 2010 at 2:36 pm

    Thanks for posting the article, was certainly a great read!

  2. Henery Schafferon 13 Jan 2010 at 2:54 pm

    Nice site. There

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