Charging Cars at Home at Night Is Not the Way to Go, Stanford Study Finds
The move
to electric vehicles will result in large costs for generating, transmitting,
and storing more power. Shifting current EV charging from home to work and
night to day could cut costs and help the grid, according to a new Stanford
study.
By Mark Golden
From: Stanford News
Service
September 22, 2022 -- The
vast majority of electric vehicle owners charge their cars at home in the
evening or overnight. We’re doing it wrong, according to a new Stanford study.
In March, the research
team published a paper on a model they created for charging demand
that can be applied to an array of populations and other factors. In the new
study, published Sept. 22 in Nature Energy, they applied their model
to the whole of the Western United States and examined the stress the region’s
electric grid will come under by 2035 from growing EV ownership. In a little
over a decade, they found, rapid EV growth alone could increase peak
electricity demand by up to 25%, assuming a continued dominance of residential,
nighttime charging.
To limit the high costs
of all that new capacity for generating and storing electricity, the
researchers say, drivers should move to daytime charging at work or public
charging stations, which would also reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This
finding has policy and investment implications for the region and its
utilities, especially since California moved in late August to ban sales of
gasoline-powered cars and light trucks starting in 2035.
“We encourage
policymakers to consider utility rates that encourage day charging and
incentivize investment in charging infrastructure to shift drivers from home to
work for charging,” said the study’s co-senior author, Ram Rajagopal, an
associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at Stanford.
In February, cumulative
sales of EVs in California reached one million, accounting for about 6% of cars
and light trucks. The state has targeted five million EVs on the road by 2030.
When the penetration hits 30% to 40% of cars on the road, the grid will
experience significant stress without major investments and changes in charging
habits, said Rajagopal. Building that infrastructure requires significant lead
time and cannot be done overnight.
“We considered the
entire Western U.S. region, because California depends heavily on electricity
imports from the other Western states. EV charging plus all other electricity
uses have consequences for the whole Western region given the interconnected
nature of our electric grid,” said Siobhan Powell, lead author of the
March study and the new one.
“We were able to show
that with less home charging and more daytime charging, the Western U.S. would
need less generating capacity and storage, and it would not waste as much solar
and wind power,” said Powell, mechanical engineering PhD ’22.
“And it’s not just
California and Western states. All states may need to rethink electricity
pricing structures as their EV charging needs increase and their grid changes,”
added Powell, who recently took a postdoctoral research position at ETH Zurich.
Once 50% of cars on the
road are powered by electricity in the Western U.S. – of which about half the
population lives in California – more than 5.4 gigawatts of energy storage
would be needed if charging habits follow their current course. That’s the
capacity equivalent of 5 large nuclear power reactors. A big shift to charging
at work instead of home would reduce the storage needed for EVs to 4.2
gigawatts.
Changing incentives
Current time-of-use
rates encourage consumers to switch electricity use to nighttime whenever
possible, like running the dishwasher and charging EVs. This rate structure
reflects the time before significant solar and wind power supplies when demand
threatened to exceed supply during the day, especially late afternoons in the
summer.
Today, California has
excess electricity during late mornings and early afternoons, thanks mainly to
its solar capacity. If most EVs were to charge during these times, then the
cheap power would be used instead of wasted. Alternatively, if most EVs
continue to charge at night, then the state will need to build more generators
– likely powered by natural gas – or expensive energy storage on a large scale.
Electricity going first to a huge battery and then to an EV battery loses power
from the extra stop.
At the local level, if
a third of homes in a neighborhood have EVs and most of the owners continue to
set charging to start at 11 p.m. or whenever electricity rates drop, the local
grid could become unstable.
“The findings from this
paper have two profound implications: the first is that the price signals are
not aligned with what would be best for the grid – and for ratepayers. The
second is that it calls for considering investments in a charging
infrastructure for where people work,” said Ines Azevedo, the new paper’s
other co-senior author and associate professor of energy science and
engineering in the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability, which opened
on Sept. 1.
“We need to move quickly
toward decarbonizing the transportation sector, which accounts for the bulk of
emissions in California,” Azevedo continued. “This work provides insight on how
to get there. Let’s ensure that we pursue policies and investment strategies
that allow us to do so in a way that is sustainable.”
Another issue with
electricity pricing design is charging commercial and industrial customers big
fees based on their peak electricity use. This can disincentivize employers
from installing chargers, especially once half or more of their employees have
EVs. The research team compared several scenarios of charging infrastructure
availability, along with several different residential time-of-use rates and
commercial demand charges. Some rate changes made the situation at the grid
level worse, while others improved it. Nevertheless, a scenario of having
charging infrastructure that encourages more daytime charging and less home
charging provided the biggest benefits, the study found.
Rajagopal and Azevedo
are also co-directors of the Bits & Watts Initiative at
Stanford’s Precourt Institute for Energy. Other co-authors of this study are Gustavo
Cezar, PhD student and a staff engineer at Stanford’s SLAC National Accelerator
Laboratory; and Liang Min, managing director of the Bits & Watts
Initiative.
This work was funded by
the California Energy Commission, the National Science Foundation, and the Bits
& Watts Initiative with support from Volkswagen.
https://news.stanford.edu/press/view/45245
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