The Electric Vehicle Charging Problem - YouTube

Channel: Wendover Productions

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With any disruptive technology, there’s a tipping point—there is a point in time
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when its path towards market dominance is a certainty.
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Now, electric vehicles are almost certainly a disruptive technology—they’re almost
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certainly a technology that will, with time, become dominant over their predecessor.
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In this case, the predecessor is the internal combustion car that you, yourself almost certainly
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use.
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Chances are, though, when asked, you’d say that your next car will not be electric, and
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you’re right—the average consumer, according to surveys, would not even consider purchasing
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an electric vehicle, demonstrating that the technology is not yet at that tipping point
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where its on a certain path towards market dominance.
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But again, that path is almost certain.
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EVs are not there yet—right now, they’re too expensive, too short range, and too slow
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to charge—but they’re close.
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In fact, research can quantify just how close they are.
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It’s been shown that the “tipping point price” for EVs, the price that will lead
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to mainstream adoption and eventual disruption, is $36,000.
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Taking a look at the prices of the base-models of three of the world’s best selling electric
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vehicles, they’re already roughly there, so we know that that’s not what’s holding
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mass-market consumers back.
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What also matters is range.
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Consumers say they need 291 miles or 469 kilometers of it before the cars can go mass-market.
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Two of those best-selling EVs, the Tesla Model 3 and Chevy Volt EV, are not far from that,
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while the Nissan LEAF lags behind.
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Range and cost are closely linked, and you can essentially trade one off for the other,
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as the battery is the single largest cost of an EV.
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That’s why the industry is so focused on innovating and scaling to lower the component
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cost of EV batteries, and it’s working.
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In 2013, the average price per kWh of an EV battery was $668, meaning the base-model Tesla
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Model 3’s 50 kWh battery would cost $22,400—2/3rds of what the vehicle sells for.
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Nowadays, the average price per kWh is all the way down to $137, meaning that same battery
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pack would cost just $6,850, and this price per kWh is expected to lower to $100 by 2023.
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It’s getting more and more possible for manufacturers to sell an EV for the magic
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$36,000 price with the magic 291 mile range.
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While EVs are not quite there yet, they’re really not far, and will be there in the next
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few years.
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So, range is not what’s significantly holding mass-market consumers back, and it won’t
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be at all within a few years.
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What is, though, is charging.
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The research shows that consumers want to be able to charge their cars from empty to
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full in 31 minutes, and that’s the magic number for mass-market adoption.
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With this, current $36,000 EVs just aren’t yet there.
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The base model Chevy Volt EV can’t even fast-charge, it doesn’t have the technology
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for it, and even the upgraded, more expensive model that does allow for fast-charging can
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only get to 39% state of charge in 31 minutes.
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The Nissan LEAF does a little better, attaining 62% state of charge in 31 minutes, while the
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base-model Tesla Model 3 does the best, with its ability to fill its battery to 83% in
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the most ideal conditions using the fastest models of Tesla Superchargers, but that would
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only give it 196 miles or 315 kilometers of range, again in the most ideal conditions.
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In colder weather, both that charging time would be greater and that range would be less.
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So, it’s currently possible to get an EV with just about what the mass-market requires
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for cost and range, but reaching that charging time—that’s just a lot tougher.
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What this research can lead us to conclude is that the largest barrier right now to mass-market
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EV adoption is, in fact, the charging problem.
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The tipping-point just will not happen without widespread fast charging, but widespread fast
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charging is just difficult because of the very way our electric grid works.
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You see, back in the 1880s, Thomas Edison, with his direct current electric system, battled
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it out with George Westinghouse, and his alternating current system.
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As the names suggest, direct current electricity flows consistently and unidirectionally, while
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alternating current oscillates in magnitude and rapidly changes direction.
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The exact details of how each works isn’t that important in this context, but what is
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is to know that, for a variety of reasons, AC power won, it’s now the standard for
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power grids, but there are certain technologies that still need DC power.
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The most widespread example of that is batteries—you cannot charge a battery using AC power.
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That’s why you don’t plug your smartphone directly into an outlet—you plug it into
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a power brick that plugs into an outlet, and that power brick is an AC to DC inverter.
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A standard iPhone charging inverter outputs 5 watts of electricity, which is plenty enough
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to charge the phone’s 11 watt hour battery in a few hours.
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A base-model Tesla Model 3, meanwhile, has a 50 kilowatt hour battery—4,500 times larger.
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Therefore, it needs a much higher wattage power inverter to charge with any speed.
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It solves this in two ways.
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Onboard that Model 3, there’s a 7.7 kW inverter that can take AC power from common sources,
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like a standard wall outlet, and convert it into DC power to charge the battery.
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At its max rate, this can charge the car fully in under ten hours, and has the advantage
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of allowing consumers to charge using regular wall plugs or by installing relatively inexpensive
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chargers on existing domestic AC electric circuits.
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The disadvantage, though, is that, while 7.7 kW is plenty fast enough for regular, overnight,
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at-home charging, it’s not fast enough to compete with the convenience of filling up
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an internal combustion car at the gas station.
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It’s not fast enough if you’re on a long-distance trip and need to be able to gain hundreds
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of miles of range in a matter of minutes.
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So, if you need more electricity faster, you need a higher wattage inverter.
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To be able to take a Tesla Model 3 from almost empty to almost full in thirty minutes, you
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want between 120 and 250 kW.
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The problem, though, is that a 250 kW inverter costs, at least in this case, $57,600 and
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is about the size of a very large fridge—it’s not exactly practical to have this as an internal
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component of the car.
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So, for faster charging, one needs to offboard the inversion process.
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That’s exactly what a DC-fast charger does—it supplies a huge quantity of DC power to the
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car, which bypasses the onboard inverter and charges the battery directly.
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Between the inverter, the charger, and all the other equipment needed for a fast-charging
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station, the cost and size is not insignificant.
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One of the more popular models, the Chargepoint Express 250, which can charge a single car
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at a somewhat slow 62.5 kW, sells for $40,800, and that’s before installation.
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Meanwhile, while it’s tough to get an exact figure, industry experts estimate it costs
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Tesla about $250,000 to build an average Supercharging station with 6-8 stalls delivering 120 to
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150 kW each, while its closest equivalent, the stations by Volkswagen’s Electrify America,
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are estimated to cost $350,000.
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But here’s something counterintuitive: using a 250 kW charger versus a 150 kW one doesn’t
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really impact how fast you charge.
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Batteries charge slower the more full they are, so the first 20% will pass far faster
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than the last 20%.
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In the context of EV charging, this means that quite quickly into the charge, the speed
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is impacted not by how much power the station is putting out, but by how much electricity
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the battery can accept.
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So, it’s actually faster to charge to 50%, drive until empty, charge to 50%, and drive
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until empty again than charging to 100% and driving to empty.
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A Tesla Model 3 can go from zero to 50% charge in 15 minutes on a 250 kW charger, and 17
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minutes on a 150 kW charger—giving it enough range to drive at least 100 miles or 160 kilometers—while
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charging from 50% to 90% would take an additional 27 minutes in both cases.
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So, combining two charges from empty to 50%, in two stops, you could effectively reach
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the tipping point speed of 100% charge in 31 minutes with existing 250 kW chargers.
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Therefore, what the industry needs is not faster chargers, but more chargers, which
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is hugely difficult given the enormous cost of fast chargers.
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The average American lives four minutes away from a gas station.
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Meanwhile, the same average American lives 31 minutes away from their nearest Tesla Supercharger.
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Currently, there are 976 supercharging stations in the US—each of which have anywhere between
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two and 56 individual chargers.
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In order to match the four-minute average of gas stations, Tesla would need to build
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an additional 31,251 Supercharging stations.
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At their $250,000 per station cost, that would cost the company some $7.8 billion, or roughly
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ten times their total annual profits from 2020.
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In addition, only some 750,000 Teslas ever have been sold in the US, meaning, to have
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fast charging stations as accessible as gas stations, the company would need to install
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a $250,000 Supercharging station for every 23 cars it had on the road.
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Quite obviously, that’s not feasible, as the stations would never break-even with such
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infrequent use, and that’s the exact problem.
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You need the infrastructure to sell the cars but you can’t build the infrastructure until
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you sell the cars.
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It is the classic chicken and the egg problem.
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There might, however, be a solution.
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According to federal government data, there are some 3,845 non-Tesla DC fast-chargers
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in the US—the vast majority of which could charge a Model 3 within an hour
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it could connect.
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Just as there was a format war in the 1880s between DC and AC power, there is now a war
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of charging standards.
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Take the example of Salina, Kansas—a small city off of Interstate 70 which most people
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only visit to refuel or, in this case, recharge.
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This Supercharger uses Tesla’s proprietary plug, this Electrify America station uses
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CCS and CHAdeMO plugs, and this hotel’s charger uses a J-1772 plug.
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There are four different plug types in one small city.
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Now, a Tesla could use the Tesla charger and the J-1772 charger with an included adapter,
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but it could only use the CHAdeMO charger with a speed-limited $540 adapter, and it
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couldn’t use the CCS charger at all—as there’s no adapter for that plug-type.
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Meanwhile, a Chevy Volt EV wouldn’t be able to use the Tesla or CHAdeMO chargers at all
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as there are no adapters available for either to its CCS plug.
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This means that, to accommodate every vehicle type, DC fast chargers need to have three
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different plug types, which, overwhelmingly, they just don’t.
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Especially along Interstate highways, there are the Tesla stations, and there are combo
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CHAdeMO and CCS stations.
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Just like Edison and Westinghouse delayed more widespread adoption of electric power
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by competing against each other in the same areas with their different, incompatible AC
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and DC standards, different stakeholders in the electric vehicle market are competing
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against each other in the US to create redundant, largely incompatible networks.
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But that’s not happening everywhere.
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You see, in Europe, CCS is the standard.
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The European Union has a directive which means that many member states, by law, require that
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public DC fast chargers include a CCS plug.
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Therefore, in the EU and neighboring countries like the UK, Norway, and Switzerland, CCS
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is now the de facto or de jure charging standard.
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That forced Tesla’s hand to the point that in 2018, it retrofitted all its existing Superchargers
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with CCS plugs, switched its Model 3’s to CCS, and released an adapter allowing its
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other models to use CCS chargers.
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All told, this means that pretty much any car in Europe can use pretty much any DC fast
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charger.
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That, combined with Europe’s higher population density, has helped ensure that the density
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and coverage of DC fast chargers is much greater than in the US, despite the fact that EV ownership
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per capita is actually higher in the US than Europe as a whole—although certain European
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countries far eclipse the US’ rate.
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Europe is almost identical in size to the US, it has a very similar number of electric
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cars overall, but it has double the number of DC-fast charging stations.
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In Germany, the furthest you can seemingly get from a DC-fast charger is here, in Winterberg.
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From this small ski-town, the nearest fast charger is about 30 miles or 50 kilometers
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away in Marburg.
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Meanwhile, in the US, if you wanted to drive directly from Dallas to Denver, two major
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cities, using a base-model Tesla Model 3, you just couldn’t.
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There’s a 226 mile or 363 kilometer stretch with no DC fast charger between Amarillo,
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Texas and Trinidad, Colorado which, given the elevation gain, the car would not make.
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While Tesla is plugging this gap soon with a new charger in Clayton, New Mexico, that
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won’t solve the problem for every single other EV on the market, since the charging
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systems are not compatible.
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Simply put, mass market consumers are not going to buy cars that can’t drive from
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Dallas to Denver.
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What Europe has that the US does not is coordinated government plans.
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Germany's federal government, for example, builds its own charging stations, in addition
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to offering strong incentives for private companies to do so as well.
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Meanwhile, the federal government in the US has done very little to incentivize fast-charger
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construction, and certainly does not have a network of its own.
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Certain states, such as Oklahoma or Colorado, do have strong, coordinated government programs
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to build fast charging infrastructure, meaning even shorter-range EVs can drive essentially
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anywhere in each state without encountering a fast-charger gap, but the problem is that
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EV drivers from Colorado or Oklahoma will eventually want to drive through Kansas, or
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Nebraska, or Wyoming, or other states that do not have a coordinated plan.
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The US Federal Government clearly wants people to buy EVs, because it offers hefty tax credits
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to those who do so, but people are not going to buy EVs without the charging infrastructure
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to support it.
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EVs are comparable in cost to internal combustion cars, their range is about what consumers
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demand, but what’s lagging behind is that charging infrastructure.
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This isn’t even an exclusively American problem.
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In Australia, one can’t drive from Perth to Sydney—the country’s forth and first
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most populous cities—in an EV, due to a massive charging gap, while in Russia, despite
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similar incentives for EV purchases, there are a total of 24 DC-fast chargers in the
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entire country.
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Of course some will always debate whether governments should be incentivizing electric
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vehicles at all, but regardless of that, they are—it’s tough to find a developed country
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that does not have some tax or other monetary incentive for EV ownership.
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The point is that they’re incentivizing the wrong way.
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EVs are very, very close to reaching the tipping-point criteria for everything but charging.
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Cost is not standing in the way, technology is not standing in the way, infrastructure
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is, so governments are putting the cart before the horse.
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Individual companies cannot reach the required scale, and even if they did, as the format
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war in the US proves, it probably wouldn’t be the kind of scale that the mass-market
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consumer demands.
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Individual car companies can deal with making individual electric vehicles attractive to
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consumers, the government doesn’t need to worry about that, but infrastructure—that’s
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the government’s job.
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Governments run or regulate roads, and bridges, and tunnels, and sidewalks, railways, airports,
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electric grids, dams, sewers, water supply networks, and even fuel supply systems, because
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they are infrastructure, and infrastructure is essential, so the only question is: why
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not charging?
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So, as you might have guessed by now, I own an electric vehicle, so I took it to my local
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Tesla Supercharger to make a companion video to this where I give a super detailed, super
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nerdy explanation of exactly how a Supercharger works from a technical perspective.
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