Through the decades the automobile has spawned dozens of cottage industries—the drive-in movie, the car hop on roller skates, the car wash and, of course, the ubiquitous filling station with its unmistakable gas pumps.
Enter the EV (electric vehicle) charging station, the filling station of the future: no pumps, just plugs.
Owners of cars that use electric power in one form or another—cars like Chevy’s Volt, which combines a battery and a gas-powered generator—can now drive coast to coast, or from Maine to Florida, or just about any place in between in the United States, without fear of “range anxiety.” The 2013 Volt’s total driving range on a full battery charge and a full tank of gas is an EPA-estimated 380 miles*; on a full battery charge alone it’s an EPA-estimated 38 miles**.
The U.S. Department of Energy is the driving force (pardon the pun) behind collective efforts to pinpoint nearly 4,000 electric charging stations with public access across the country with the list growing daily as the DOE assembles data retrieved by its National Renewable Energy Laboratory and updates the primary list twice a month.
In many states, plug-in-vehicle drivers also have access to charging stations at libraries, shopping centers, hospitals and businesses. This infrastructure is quickly expanding, providing drivers with the convenience and confidence they require.
Niketa Kumar, a spokesperson for the DOE in Washington, told us that the department has partnered with several industry electronics companies, including Google, Tom Tom, Best Buy, Pacific Gas & Electric Co. and Coulomb, “to improve collection and analysis of public electric charging station data. With the support of more than 80 public and private sector organizations,” she said, “including charging equipment manufacturers, installers and charging networks; vehicle manufacturers, Internet and GIS companies, and major consumer goods retailers, we are working to provide consumers with consistent, up-to-date information about the EV charging stations in communities nationwide.”
- Courtesy of Chevrolet.com
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