Congress Proposes Nationwide Network of Electric Car Chargers

A new bill in the House of Representatives would lay the groundwork for a national grid of electric vehicle charging stations.

Facilitating Change

Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Andy Levin have introduced a new bill that would build a national infrastructure for electric vehicles.

The EV Freedom Act would allocate the resources for the U.S. to build a nationwide network of electric vehicle chargers within five years, Reuters reports. That would alleviate a major hurdle to widespread electric car adoption, making it far easier for the population to transition away from gas power.

Five-Year Plan

Without a national infrastructure, electric vehicle owners largely depend on each automaker’s decision to build charging stations, which aren’t always compatible with one another. While Tesla has installed plenty, other automakers’ customers often need to travel farther just to find power.

“There is just no way that we will get to broad scale adoption of electric vehicles until we crush range anxiety and then it will happen precipitously,” Levin told Reuters.

Step One

Democratic lawmakers have called for a national transition to electric vehicles by 2030 or 2035 at the latest, Reuters reports. Getting charging stations in place by 2025 would be an important step toward that goal.

“This is the infrastructure bill that we need to be rallying around.” Ocasio-Cortez told Reuters. “A lot of naysayers will say, ‘They are trying to get rid of cars.’ Well, we’re not trying to get rid of cars. We’re trying to actually advance and improve our fleets… We have to go electric.”

READ MORE: U.S. House Democrats propose electric vehicle charging network [Reuters]

More on electric vehicles: Electric Vehicles Are the Future, but Their Batteries Are Stuck in the Past

The post Congress Proposes Nationwide Network of Electric Car Chargers appeared first on Futurism.

Go here to see the original:
Congress Proposes Nationwide Network of Electric Car Chargers

Related Posts

Comments are closed.