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'There will be one in your neighbourhood': Queensland government promises EV chargers every 150 kilometres

www.abc.net.au 'There will be one in your neighbourhood': Queensland government promises EV chargers every 150 kilometres

Energy Minister Mick de Brenni tells those making the switch to electric: there will be an EV charger nearby.

'There will be one in your neighbourhood': Queensland government promises EV chargers every 150 kilometres
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  • “There will be one in your neighbourhood” That’s fantastic if there is only a handful of EVs in your neighbourhood, but if every man and his dog all want to charge their EVs on the way to work at 7:30am, they will still be there are 7:30pm, in a queue.

    • but if every man and his dog all want to charge their EVs on the way to work at 7:30am, they will still be there are 7:30pm, in a queue.

      People need to look at public EV charging differently. It's not like a petrol station, you shouldn't need to use a public charger and do a big fill up once a week for work commutes.

      You come home from work, you plug your car in at home. 10 hours later it has refilled the charge you used up today, and you're ready to go to work in the morning, fully charged.

      To put that into numbers:

      A standard 15 amp circuit should be able to put 20kwhr into an EV battery overnight (in 8-10 hours).

      A Polestar 2 uses about 18kwhr per 100km. so with your 20kwhr you should be able to drive an hour/50km each way in city traffic and make that charge up again each night.

      The only people really needing public EV charging are those with on-street parking, unit/apartment dwellers (for now, until apartment infrastructure gets upgraded, could be a decade still), and longer distance travellers.

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