Buttigieg: Building 8 EV Charging Stations Under $7.5 Billion Investment for Them Is ‘On Track’

PatMiles

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On Thursday’s broadcast of CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg stated that building eight electric vehicle charging stations so far under the Inflation Reduction Act’s $7.5 billion investment in electric vehicle charging stations is “on track.” Because most construction will occur in the second half of the decade.

Co-host Joe Kernen asked, “[O]ur designs on electrification of the auto industry, have we recalibrated there? And I’ll just give you one item and you can — maybe you can explain why, but under the Inflation Reduction Act, 7.5 billion for building these charging stations. The latest information, eight have been built with the 7.5 billion that had been allocated. You’re supposed to get to 500,000 of these charging stations by 2030. What is really the problem with — do you — have you looked at that and figured out why?”

Buttigieg responded, “Oh yeah, that’s on track. So, we’re at about 190,000 publicly available charging stations in the U.S. That’s approximately double what the level was when President Biden came in. The issue, though, is that there are some gaps in the market, ones that are just not going to be built by the private sector that’s been building the construction of those chargers to date. That’s why the legislation provided for funding to do federally-supported chargers that are intended to be online before 2030. Now, the bulk of that construction will happen in ’27, ’28, quite a bit, actually, I expect by 2026. A handful, as you mentioned, are actually already up and running. But really what you’re going to see is more in the second half of this decade. And it’s really important to have those federally-supported chargers, because you have stretches of road or even just in the middle of our cities, apartment buildings, places in our economy where it just doesn’t yet pencil out for there to be the private sector profitably doing that. And even though about 80% of EV charging happens at home, the reality is that the new EV kind of landscape we’re working toward where the president’s goal is about half of sales to be EVs by the end of this decade requires us, by the end of this decade, to have a lot of charging apparatus that just isn’t there as we’re sitting here in 2024.”
 
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Studies show that emissions from EVs and lithium/cobalt mining is way worse. If the EV industry is scaled up and say hypothetically, takes over… the amount of mining done all over the world will have some serious consequences. It’s not about the “environment” like they say.

At surface level, all this money will fill a bunch of bureaucrats pockets. On a deeper note, who knows… AI + EV - Rise of Skynet.
 
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so fucking stupid.
the only thing the government should be spending money on is the power plants, preferably nuclear so it'll be fucking cheap.
I actually have a tesla, so I'm one of the ones who should care and this is such BS.
the best part about an EV is except for like twice a year, you never need a gas station or fast charger.(unless you actually do regular 400 mile trips or haul stuff, that's different)
they just want to funnel money to their union buddies, this won't help you or me or anyone else.
listen to Elon Musk, he doesn't want any subsidies for anything! that stuff was needed 10 years ago when this stuff was being invented and not popular.
now it's cheaper to buy a tesla than Toyota.