Smart EV Charging: A Global Review of Promising Practices
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Cost-reflective pricing leverages the fluctuations in retail energy and network prices over the course of the day and night to encourage consumers to change how and when they charge their vehicles. An effective program will motivate consumers to change their charging behavior in a way that both lowers their costs and reduces power system costs.
- Smart technology is a critical resource for capturing the flexibility EVs can provide, especially when used in conjunction with smart pricing. Charging processes can even be automated if price and other data can be communicated. This feature is generally found only in more advanced programs. The goal is to enable consumers to make choices to reduce their bills without needing to constantly pay attention to the relevant technology.
- Smart infrastructure refers to the strategic siting of EV charging infrastructure. More precisely, if the public or private infrastructure is carefully planned, it can serve mobility demands, take advantage of existing grid infrastructure and capacity, and provide balancing services. This powerful combination can substantially reduce the cost of integrating electric vehicles into the power system. The higher objective of this strategy is also to steer the time and location of EV charging to best serve consumers and the grid.
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Smart Pricing
3.2. Smart Technology
- It can measure consumers’ real-time, or near real-time, energy consumption.
- It can transmit this data to the consumer and to other authorized parties.
- It has the ability to automatically control consumption.
3.3. Smart Infrastructure
4. Discussion
4.1. Time-Varying Electricity Pricing Can Motivate Electric Vehicle Drivers to Charge at Times that are Advantageous for the Power System
4.2. Leveraging Smart Pricing with Responsive Technology Generates Substantial Benefits
4.3. Grid-Friendly Charging Infrastructure is Key to Minimising Costs
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Organisation | Date | RAP Author | Duration |
---|---|---|---|
ChargePoint | 26 November 2018 | Dr. Julia Hildermeier, Christos Kolokathis | 1:30 |
Norwegian E-Mobility Association | 11 September 2018 | Dr. Julia Hildermeier, Christos Kolokathis Catharina Wiese | 1:30 |
Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate | 25 September 2018 | Dr. Julia Hildermeier, Christos Kolokathis Catharina Wiese | 1:30 |
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Tariff Design | Main Features | Prerequisites | User Experience |
---|---|---|---|
Two-period time-of-use tariff for energy (Spain) [27] | 80% discount for EV drivers charging during pre-defined night hours, at 0.03 €/kWh, compared to the day charge of around 0.16 €/kWh. | Simple binary meter. | A Nissan Leaf owner will save approximately 167 euros per year by charging the EV at the night tariff instead of the standard rate. |
Octopus Agile (UK) [28] | Tied to half-hourly day-ahead market, promotes renewable energy use and flexibility. | Smart meter, phone app, active participation of customers. | 150 euros per year saved compared to standard tariff. Energy consumption shifted to low-demand hours. |
Radius (Denmark) [29] | Time-of-use network tariff with a surcharge for winter peak hours (5–8 pm) of 0.9 €/kWh, compared to standard rate of 0.35 €/kWh. | None, standard rate applicable to customers connected to low-voltage (households) and medium-voltage grid (commercial). |
Technology | Main Features | Level of Consumer Intervention Required |
---|---|---|
Green Mountain Power (Vermont, U.S.) [31,32] | Technology and pricing package; charging is controlled by utility and shifted to off-peak hours, includes an opt-out choice. | None. Utility supplies a seven-kilowatt charger free of charge to consumers who buy a new EV, and for a $10 monthly payment to consumers who already own one. The EV owner indicates when the vehicle is available. |
Jedlix (NL) [33,34] | Application assesses optimal charging profile, including grid capacity, sustainable energy availability, and energy prices, shifts charging to preferential hours. | Very low. Consumer only communicates travel times. |
Maxem (NL) [35] | Wall box/ application to integrate EV charging station, along with any self- generation (e.g., solar photovoltaic), and other uses and appliances (e.g., electrical heating) into a smart home or office building. | None to very low. Application monitors the electricity draw and feed-in for the different applications and implements smart EV charging to ensure safety (e.g., decreases EV charging if the home’s demand is greater than its own production and network connection). |
MyEnergi (UK) [36] | Smart meter paired with application recognizes fuel source (for example, domestically produced solar energy) and directs it to EV charging. | Very low. User has option to manually determine charging time and mode. |
Infrastructure Solution | Main Features | Advantages for Grid Integration | |
---|---|---|---|
Public park-and-charge programme (UK) [42,43] | Convert street infrastructure such as light poles into 3–5 kW charging outlets. | Uses existing electrified infrastructure, reduces cost of installation from 8000 to 1000 pounds sterling [44], encourages off-peak use for parked cars, additional efficiency gain through shared infrastructure. | |
Study: public fast charging points along existing grid (San Francisco, U.S., and Ottawa, Canada) [45] | Utility mapping tool identified more than 14,000 locations where fast charging points could be installed to provide every EV driver with a fast charger within a one-mile (1.6 km) radius. Identifies upgrade costs. | Joint energy and transport planning, use of existing infrastructure. | |
Transmission system operator mapping tool for highway fast charging stations (UK) [46] | UK’s transmission system operator, National Grid, studied 50 optimal locations for fast chargers (up to 350 kW) along highways, allowing 90% of UK motorists to reach a location within 50 miles. | Estimated cost 1 billion pounds, also avoids cost of building new infrastructure by linking these locations to the high-voltage grid. | |
Battery-assisted charging for cars (Greenlots/Hawaii, U.S.) [47]; for ferries (Ampera, Electric Ferry, Norway) [48] | Hawaii: battery-assisted fast charging infrastructure was built to avoid a more expensive connection to the grid; battery-electric ferry offers “fast charge” for ships ashore and slower charging when the ferry is not plugged in. |
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Hildermeier, J.; Kolokathis, C.; Rosenow, J.; Hogan, M.; Wiese, C.; Jahn, A. Smart EV Charging: A Global Review of Promising Practices. World Electr. Veh. J. 2019, 10, 80. https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj10040080
Hildermeier J, Kolokathis C, Rosenow J, Hogan M, Wiese C, Jahn A. Smart EV Charging: A Global Review of Promising Practices. World Electric Vehicle Journal. 2019; 10(4):80. https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj10040080
Chicago/Turabian StyleHildermeier, Julia, Christos Kolokathis, Jan Rosenow, Michael Hogan, Catharina Wiese, and Andreas Jahn. 2019. "Smart EV Charging: A Global Review of Promising Practices" World Electric Vehicle Journal 10, no. 4: 80. https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj10040080
APA StyleHildermeier, J., Kolokathis, C., Rosenow, J., Hogan, M., Wiese, C., & Jahn, A. (2019). Smart EV Charging: A Global Review of Promising Practices. World Electric Vehicle Journal, 10(4), 80. https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj10040080