Sparse Plug-ins for Electric Vehicles Spark Creativity Among Their Owners
Owning an electric vehicle requires more than global-cooling ambitions. It takes guile, planning, sharp vision, a silver tongue -- and a 50-foot extension cord.
Steve Bernheim beside his Corbin Sparrow. Photo by Susan Bauer.
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Steve Bernheim knows accessible outlets like a firefighter knows hydrants. He has to -- his Corbin Sparrow runs only 25 miles on a charge.
"You do guerrilla charging where you locate these plugs," Bernheim, an attorney who lives in the Seattle suburb of Edmonds, said according to an Associated Press article published in today's Detroit News. "I'm an expert at finding them."
While California has more than 500 public charging stations at parks, malls and grocery stores to serve electric vehicles that rolled out in the last decade, the network is still thin across the rest of the country, forcing drivers like Bernheim to get creative.
That may change as charging stations crop up in San Jose, Seattle and Portland to serve early adopters and pave the way for a new breed of mass market plug-in cars.
"Every auto company in the world is developing all-electric or plug-in hybrids," Zan Dubin Scott, a spokeswoman for Plug In America, a nonprofit advocacy group for electric car owners, told the AP. "The utilities, municipalities and smart business people are seeing that this is the future."
The vast majority of electric vehicle owners charge their cars at home while they sleep, so most trips aren't a problem.
But drivers can now plug in -- reservations recommended -- at two park-and-ride lots in King County, which includes Seattle. The county plans to add sockets at three garages under construction.
"We want to make sure we're ahead of the curve in doing what we can to support the use of these vehicles," Rochelle Ogershok, a county transportation spokeswoman, told the news service.
In Oregon, Portland General Electric put five free charging stations in downtown Portland, Salem and suburban Lake Oswego and plans to add more.
At the end of the year, Coulomb Technologies plans to roll out five curbside charging stations in downtown San Jose that drivers can access through a prepaid plan. The company is working with entities in New York and Florida to do something similar, president and founder Praveen Mandal said.
Go to the article to see what other businesses and communities are doing with regard to EVs.
- Posted by
- Scott Doggett October 20, 2008, 9:33 AM
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- Batteries, Corbin, Emissions, Energy Companies, Fuel Economy, Plug-ins and Electric
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- Corbin Sparrow, Electric Vehicles, EV, Plug In America, plug-in electric vehicles, Steve Bernheim, Zan Dubin Scott





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