Electric Vehicles

Victoria called on to ditch “outdated” network fees making EV fast-chargers unviable

Published by

The Driven

The Victorian Government is facing calls to intervene and prevent ‘out-dated’ electricity network tariffs being imposed on electric vehicle charging stations, that threaten to make the rollout of new fast-chargers unviable.

Under a draft tariff determination issued by the Australian Energy Regulator for Victorian electricity networks, electric vehicle fast-charge stations could be slugged with network demand charges, which electric vehicle advocates say are unfair, and do not reflect chargers ‘actual contribution electricity network demand.

Under the current network tariff regime, electric vehicle charging stations may be charged network demand tariffs in the same way as major industrial energy users for their use of the electricity network.

This arrangement applies despite electric vehicle chargers being used intermittently, whereas traditional industrial users continuously draw upon the grid throughout the day.

Electric vehicle advocates say that the network charges are out-dated and the financial hit caused by the network charges could potentially hamper the roll-out of new electric vehicle charging infrastructure.

While the AER noted the concerns in a draft determination of charges that would apply between 2021 to 2026, it suggested that it may still seek to impose the charges in their current form.

“Some stakeholder submissions received in response to the Victorian distributors’ proposals raised concerns that demand capacity requirement thresholds and charges may act as a barrier to the rollout of electric vehicle public charging stations, as these costs are prohibitive while utilisation of public charging stations is still low,” the AER says.

“We are in agreement that tariffs need to be designed in a way that does not prohibit rollout of electric vehicle charging stations. However, we view the demand capacity requirement thresholds as a suitable means to reflect the distributors’ costs for providing the required capacity to large business customers, including electric vehicle charging station operators.”

The AER will make a final determination on the network tariffs following a period of consultation, but the Electric Vehicle Council has called for Victorian energy minister Lily D’Ambrosio to consider intervening, to protect electric vehicle charging infrastructure from exorbatant tariffs.

The Victorian government could decide to directly regulate the application of network tariffs and their application to electric vehicle charging infrastructure, effetively sidestepping the Australian Energy Regulator’s determination.

“If the energy sector does not address this barrier, it will make establishing and running an EV charger in Victoria very unappealing to private sector investors,” chief executive of the Electric Vehicle Council Behyad Jafari said in a statement.

“(Energy minister) Lily D’Ambrosio has very correctly noted we need to encourage as much private sector investment in Victorian charging as possible, but the AER’s decision threatens to undermine that.

“If you impose the same energy costs on fast-charging stations as large warehouses you are going to cripple Victoria’s promising transition to electrification for a generation.

“Right now, Australian governments should be doing all they can to nudge people toward cleaner, quieter, and more reliable electric options. Slapping a massive industrial tariff on the fledgling fast-charging station sector runs completely counter to that aim.”

To read the full story on RenewEconomy’s electric vehicle dedicated site The Driven, click here…

Michael Mazengarb is a climate and energy policy analyst with more than 15 years of professional experience, including as a contributor to Renew Economy. He writes at Tempests and Terawatts.
Michael Mazengarb

Michael Mazengarb is a climate and energy policy analyst with more than 15 years of professional experience, including as a contributor to Renew Economy. He writes at Tempests and Terawatts.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Energy Insiders Podcast: “I don’t know if we can adapt”

WMO’s climate and energy lead Roberta Boscolo on the latest climate report, the 1.55°C average…

31 January 2025

Queensland unveils strict new wind farm planning rules, with solar projects to follow

LNP introduces strict new planning rules for wind projects in state with lowest share of…

31 January 2025

Neighbours of giant wind project offered up to $100m in unique deal that could shape design

Near neighbours of one of the country's biggest wind projects are being given the opportunity…

31 January 2025

Farmers offered $300m in discount loans for solar, batteries, EVs, seaweed and windbreaks

Farmers offered up to $300 million of discount loans to help efforts to cut emissions,…

31 January 2025

Biggest vanadium flow battery in Australia promised for ailing Kalgoorlie grid

A 500 MWh vanadium flow battery - the biggest in Australia - has been promised…

30 January 2025

Big batteries cash in as they charge past gas to become second biggest player in evening peaks

Big batteries have overtaken gas as the second biggest player in the evening demand peaks,…

30 January 2025