Info!
UPDATED 1 Sept: The EI library in London is temporarily closed to the public, as a precautionary measure in light of the ongoing COVID-19 situation. The Knowledge Service will still be answering email queries via email , or via live chats during working hours (09:15-17:00 GMT). Our e-library is always open for members here: eLibrary , for full-text access to over 200 e-books and millions of articles. Thank you for your patience.

Road to decarbonisation requires smarter EV charging

A new report from the Energy Technologies Institute (ETI) suggests that managed or ‘smart’ charging could support the widespread integration of low carbon cars and vans into the energy system to meet the UK’s 2050 climate change targets.

Although significant progress has been made to decarbonise the country’s electricity, the same level of progress is needed to decarbonise transport, its says. Meeting important UK government policy targets by 2030 will require significantly more than 4mn plug-in vehicles to be on the road.

The report was prompted by the completion of the ETI’s Consumers, Vehicles and Energy Integration (CVEI) project. As part of the two-year project, charging trials were commissioned to collect detailed journey and charging data from 127 battery electric vehicles (BEVs) and 121 plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs). The research shows that plug-in vehicles are attractive to the majority of UK drivers, provided they cost the same over a four-year period as current cars, have sufficient range, and recharging is easy and cost-effective.

In terms of decarbonisation, BEVs and PHEVs are complementary, not competitive, and the preference is less important to decarbonisation and charging than the proportion of miles actually travelled using electricity, and the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions produced by generating the additional electricity. Households that drive a lot of miles on electricity, and charge mostly on electricity from low carbon supplies, will be critical to meeting UK climate targets, notes the study.

The report surmises that now is the time to lay the foundations for extensive access to vehicle charging and effective, customer-focused charging management – or ‘smart charging’ – to prevent charging becoming a barrier to mass-market uptake. 

Unmanaged charging by mass-market drivers peaks at the same time as current electricity demand, with potentially serious consequences for UK infrastructure. Charging access through market design and shaping incentives for consumers are needed to achieve the most efficient use of existing resources, and mass market consumers appear receptive to this.

Jonathan Wills, CEO at the ETI, says: ‘Early uptake of electric vehicles and the provision of public charging points have been effective, but deeper penetration of low carbon transport is needed quickly if the UK is to meet its targets. Through our CVEI project we wanted to understand how the bulk of consumers, rather than early adopters and enthusiasts, would use the technology. How might the market structures and energy supply systems need to change in order to encourage the wider adoption of plug-in vehicles and their integration into the energy system?’

‘We believe that right now, the UK stands at the end of the first phase of vehicle electrification, with evidence from the progress already made pointing towards the challenges to be addressed in the next stage. The UK needs a strategy to provide enough capacity, coupled with enough intelligence to meet drivers’ needs, while at the same time avoiding risks to the electricity infrastructure or the addition of high-carbon peak generating capacity. Understanding driving patterns and needs, and providing appropriate infrastructure, market designs and incentives will need national policies and standards to support local plans and investments.’

Commenting on the report, Liam Lidstone, Infrastructure and Engineering business lead at Energy Systems Catapult, says: ‘How to integrate the new wave of electric vehicles is one of the trickiest challenges facing the energy system. If done well, it can make better use of clean electricity and help reduce the need for costly network reinforcements. But if done inefficiently, it could heap pressure on our power system at peak times.’

‘Consumers will be central to this challenge. They need convenient, affordable propositions that will help make it easy to shift their charging to off-peak times. This insight report showed that consumers are willing to shift their charging patterns, if it is easy to do so. If replicated across the wider power system, this could help keep the costs of decarbonisation low.’

News Item details


Journal title: Petroleum Review

Countries: UK -

Subjects: Electric vehicles, Forecourt retailing, Alternative fuels, Forecasting, Decarbonisation

Please login to save this item