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Electric Car Charge Posts To Be Installed In Every New Home In England (cleantechnica.com) 185

England is introducing a mandatory electric car charging point for each newly built home. "This means that every brand new home, by law, will have to have a charging port for your electric vehicle -- even if you don't yet own one," reports CleanTechnica. From the report: This would make it easier on both fully electric and plug-in hybrid owners in England who use the government's home charger subsidy, which has funded the installation of almost 100,000 wall boxes, as home chargers are commonly called. In the Forward written by the Secretary of Transport, Rt Hon. Chris Grayling, he states that in the previous year the government set out a "bold and integrated Industrial Strategy" that was designed to create a "high-growth, high productivity green economy across the UK."

It would be an economy ready for the 21st century and a huge part of this is a plan for solving the problem of roadside nitrogen dioxide concentrations. The goal is to cut exposure to air pollutants, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and improve the UK's energy security. One of these polices states that they will support the development of one of the best electric vehicle infrastructure networks in the world.

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Electric Car Charge Posts To Be Installed In Every New Home In England

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  • Wondering (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Wednesday September 04, 2019 @07:51PM (#59159790)
    Which uncle/cousin/brother in law of a politician owns the company that sells those charging ports...
    • How would their electrical distribution system hold up if these people were to actually use them - you know, all arriving home in the evening at about peak residential usage time, and plugging their cars in?

      • by heybiff ( 519445 )
        Its about the same draw as an AC unit or a dryer...so it'll hold up about the same as a summer night.
        • Its about the same draw as an AC unit or a dryer...so it'll hold up about the same as a summer night.

          This might be concurrent with the AC or dryer usage etc., although timer controls could be used. I knew someone who lived way out in the country using an old generator, and had a similar dilemma: If the dryer is running, you can't vacuum, or cook a roast! As their finances improved, they resolved their little problem.

          • Modern wall boxes combined with smart meters do this automatically. I had mine installed on a single dedicated 7kW phase, but it is capable of charging at 22kW using shared 3 phase power, using whatever power budget is left over on the house connection.
            • Almost all residential units in the UK are single phase. The few that are not will be in converted industrial or commercial units. Although, in fact, many small commercial and industrial units are also single phase.

        • Its about the same draw as an AC unit or a dryer...so it'll hold up about the same as a summer night.

          No, it's not the same. The same means it is the same. This is more. Right now people use their AC and dryers at the same time. Now we are talking about adding another power hungry appliance, possibly during peak usage. I'm not taking sides here. But I will point out incorrect statements.

        • This is England. Few homes have AC.

        • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
          AC units. In the UK. LOL
      • How would their electrical distribution system hold up if these people were to actually use them - you know, all arriving home in the evening at about peak residential usage time, and plugging their cars in?

        Oh, man. It's the same problem *everywhere* where electric cars are being pushed. Where is the electricity coming from in the first place? How will the grid handle it - especially at peak demand hours? Where is the cobalt and the lithium in the batteries coming from? So yeah, no tailpipe emissions, out of sight and out of mind.

        Okay, so, if 90% of those charging stations never get used, what's the environmental impact of making - and hard-wiring the copper! - for all those boxes?

        This is a bold strategy on th

        • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

          This is about long term planning. It's way way cheaper to fit the charge points as the home is being built that retrofitting afterwards. As some point every home is going to need one (at least if they have a vehicle). So lets mandate them now.

          I would also add that in England 75% of all homes where build before 1980. About 20% are over 100 years old. These house are likely going to be around for a *long* time, so getting it right now matters. I would imagine that this is wildly different from say the USA whe

      • Simple - it wouldn't, obviously. When everyone switches to electrics it about doubles electricity demand. Luckily it can't and won't happen overnight, it will take time for all these electric cars to be produced and sold, time enough to beef up the grid and follow the rising demand.
      • by amorsen ( 7485 )

        Sensible UK residents with electric cars are on Economy 7 tariffs or better, so they tell their cars not to charge until after 10pm. Unless the battery is close to empty, but only a small fraction of cars will run their batteries close to empty on any given day.

      • What the driver wants is something like "130 miles of range in the battery by 7am)", so...

        The plan is that home EV charging will ramp down or switch off when there is high demand on the grid ("demand-response") either nationally or locally, and ramp up when there is an excess of electricity supply.

        The incentive for this is real-time pricing - you can already do this in the UK using energy retailers like "Octopus Energy" with the slightly cringily named "Agile Octopus" contract.

        Octopus will charge you up to

      • Not a bit deal. Car simply does not charge until after a certain time.
      • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
        Well, a typical electric car consumes about 30kwh per hundred miles. The average UK person drives about 20 miles per day, which works out to about 6kwh. The average UK household uses about 9kwh/day average. About a 70% increase in average electrical usage. Although, residential usage of electricity only represents about 30% of overall usage, which means a total average increase of 20%. Ball park numbers.
    • Any project with Chris Grayling attached to it is usually doomed to failure and/or cost a fortune. He seems to be the least able to run a project (apart form into the ground), being totally unqualified to do anything is a qualification to be in the UK Conservative Government.
      • Re:Wondering (Score:5, Insightful)

        by gnasher719 ( 869701 ) on Thursday September 05, 2019 @08:39AM (#59161330)

        Any project with Chris Grayling attached to it is usually doomed to failure and/or cost a fortune.

        For those who don't know much about Chris Grayling: When Boris Johnson grabbed power as Prime Minister, he fired many ministers: Most of them for not being yes-men, but one of them for incompetence, and that was Chris Grayling.

        Chris Grayling was the one who awarded a multi-million contract to deliver additional ferry services to a company that doesn't have any ferries and is completely incapable of doing the job. And then P&O Ferries, who has been in the ferry business for 180 years, read about it in the newspaper, was wondering why they had never heard of this new ferry service, figured out that the contract had been awarded without any bidding process, sued the government and won £33 million.

        And this particular mishap, which I find hard to explain with stupidity alone, was one of his minor mistakes. Total damage through his incompetence is estimated over 2.5 billion British pound.

    • Which uncle/cousin/brother in law of a politician owns the company that sells those charging ports...

      I'm not sure, but really there's no reason to install a full charging station in each new home. It's sufficient to simply require that a 50A 220V outlet be installed... an ordinary NEMA 14-50 receptacle [amazon.com] ($10) in the garage, or if there's no garage one in an outdoor enclosure [amazon.com] ($37). The total cost for installing such a thing during construction shouldn't be more than $150, including the receptacle, the 6-gauge wire, the 50A circuit breaker and labor (the work is very easy when the walls are open).

      If you

      • Oops, I somehow missed that this is in England. The NEMA 14-50 is a US outlet. Whatever the UK uses for high-amperage outlets, e.g. for electric dryers, welders, etc., would be the right choice. UK electricity is all 220V, so that part is already covered; they just need receptacles and wiring that can deliver the amperage.
  • It's hilarious because in the US we have silly hot button issues like abortion and bathroom rights. In Europe, they distract their citizen with environmental non-issues while their pensions and healthcare systems get bankrupted.

    Unlike the US, regular ports in the UK are 220v which should be adequate for charging. No need for special anything.

    Just seems like special interest graft.

    • Unlike the US, regular ports in the UK are 220v which should be adequate for charging. No need for special anything.

      While you can .... this isn't really a good idea. You want to be able to pull 6-7kW or more. A standard 13A/240V outlet isn't really meant to deliver this amount of power for long periods.

    • environmental non-issues

      Environmental issues are about the only issues that actually count. Unless your one of these weird "scientists are in a vast left wing conspiracy to lie about physics" people.

      Yeah this mandate is a bit odd. But its also a step in the right direction.

    • Our car has a 13A socket charger, which is fine, but it did make the socket get a bit warm sometimes when I used it. We've got a 16A circuit to a proper charge point, and apart from needing switching off and on occasionally, it is far better behaved. It also means we're not leaving the (expensive) charger out to be stolen (we have a chain on the cable).

      However... there are lots of things wrong here. The first is, if you by an EV or plug-in hybrid, you can get a charge point "for free". The government will p

  • Good idea (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sit1963nz ( 934837 ) on Wednesday September 04, 2019 @08:25PM (#59159898)
    Far cheaper to put in while building a new home than to retrofit later, and the additional cost compared to the house build will be sod all.
    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Far cheaper to put in while building a new home than to retrofit later, and the additional cost compared to the house build will be sod all.

      At least the circuitry to the charging point. - that's one extra circuit breaker and a solid piece of cable. If they're just mandating it should be EV charger ready it's not a big deal. If they're mandating an actual charging box be attached to that wire it's fairly expensive and wasteful, different companies have different chargers and standards/features change so you can probably get a better box when you actually need one. Of course it's not expensive compared to buying a whole home but it all adds up.

    • by Shark ( 78448 )

      Don't underestimate what effect 'required by law' has on normal market prices.

  • The vast majority of new affordable homes in the UK do not have offstreet parking, or even allocated parking - you have to go more expensive for that - and yet the decree makes no mention or allowances for these properties.

    • Chargers (strictly speaking EVSEs, not chargers) built into the sidewalks? It's not that hard.

    • The phrase "every brand new home" is clickbait.

      I can't easily find actual, real world, contact details for "cleantechnica.com" which would be a minimum criterion for credibility in my book. The article to which they ultimately link says no such thing.

  • I wonder how they plan to provide the electricity for all these new electric cars, don't you?

    Look what I found:
    https://www.heraldscotland.com... [heraldscotland.com]

    So, the UK is drilling for more natural gas. And the article is all about how this natural gas drilling is going to reduce their CO2 output. Maybe instead of, or in addition to, these electrical outlets they put a natural gas line to the garage. That way they can cut out the middleman of having to run the generators with the natural gas to charge up these electric cars and just run the cars on natural gas.

    Or maybe they can invest in an energy source that is reliable, inexpensive, takes little land area, is plentiful, safe, and low in CO2. They can claim that they will be doing carbon capture and sequestration in the future but as that article points out they don't have much of a plan for that right now.

    I'm pretty sure the UK knows what the solution is to this problem, they just aren't ready to admit it to themselves just yet.

    • by Harlequin80 ( 1671040 ) on Wednesday September 04, 2019 @09:39PM (#59160096)

      Gas power plant --> transmission --> charge electric car --> move electric car is significantly more efficient than the car burning any type of fuel. That is not counting any regenerative power gains under braking which are standard in consumer electric vehicles.

      Also I assume you are trying to intimate a nuclear power station, in which case perhaps you want to look at the Hinkley Point power station which is a nuclear plant currently under construction.

      • by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer@noSPAm.earthlink.net> on Wednesday September 04, 2019 @10:48PM (#59160262)

        I assume you are trying to intimate a nuclear power station

        I am. That's because there's a lot of people that believe the UK will not meet their CO2 emission reduction goals without more nuclear power.

        https://uk.reuters.com/article... [reuters.com]

        Britainâ(TM)s climate advisers, the Committee on Climate Change (CCC), said Britain would need to ramp up its renewable electricity generation such as wind and solar to meet the net zero target.

        But the CCC also said it was likely that renewables would need to be complemented by low-carbon power options such as nuclear power and carbon capture and storage at gas or biomass power plants.

        in which case perhaps you want to look at the Hinkley Point power station which is a nuclear plant currently under construction.

        I took a look at it, and it will not be enough as pointed out by the article I linked to.

        All but one of Britainâ(TM)s current nuclear fleet, which provide around 20 percent of the countryâ(TM)s electricity, are due to close by 2030.

        Estimates are that the UK will need at least 30 GW of nuclear power to reach their CO2 emissions goal in 2050. Hinkley Point C is 3 GW. The UK will need 10 more of these in the next 30 years.

        Electric cars are a good idea to meet this goal, but only if that doesn't mean building many more natural gas power stations to charge them. Electric cars are nice for a commuter vehicle but no battery will power the big trucks that need lots of power over long distances. For those a switch to natural gas would certainly help in their CO2 emission goal.

        • "but no battery will power the big trucks that need lots of power over long distances." - check out the up and coming Tesla semi. Anyway, distances aren't that great within UK borders compared to USA.
        • No battery will power the big trucks? Talk to Tesla and a few others about that. UPS already has Electric tractors in use on our Highways in testing of the concepts. Now they don't go pure cross country, they run routes that mostly go out four hours to meet another tractor, swap trailers and run back four hours for 8 planned driving hours plus a couple hours of leeway time before the drivers have to park.

          EV-Big rigs are a thing and they are going to revolutionize the industry. The Tractors themselves do
    • They are also building more solar and wind farms plus a brand new nuclear plant.
  • No Room (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hoofie ( 201045 ) <(mickey) (at) (mouse.com)> on Wednesday September 04, 2019 @09:12PM (#59159990)

    And just exactly WHERE are people going to park their cars to charge them ? If you want a new house in the UK with enough space to park your car it will cost you lots of coins - it's not like the US where many houses have driveways. If it's a block of apartments they will have communal parking.

    Developers are notorious for cramming as many small houses as possible into a development with garages too small for cars and other crap.

    • And just exactly WHERE are people going to park their cars to charge them ? If you want a new house in the UK with enough space to park your car it will cost you lots of coins - it's not like the US where many houses have driveways. If it's a block of apartments they will have communal parking.

      The communal parking must have EV chargers at every parking stall, obviously, with some mechanism for billing the electricity cost to the right person.

      Developers are notorious for cramming as many small houses as possible into a development with garages too small for cars and other crap.

      This should addressed by building codes.

  • It's about time (Score:2, Insightful)

    by DogDude ( 805747 )
    It's about time that a government did this. This is going to go a long way towards moving away from ICE's. It should be a law in the US, as well. What would it add... a fraction of a percent to the cost of every new house?
    • What about the infrastructure cost to transport terawatts of electricity around to support all this electric vehicle charging? Doing away with petrol and diesel is great 'n' all but that replacement energy has got to come from somewhere.
      • You seriously believe that you're the only person to consider the impact of EV uptake on the National Grid and EV update will be a surprise to them?
        TW's of additional electricity, LOL! Did you learn a new word and want to use it?
        Try an additional 20MW with intelligent charging. That’s the equivalent output a reasonably sized offshore wind farm.

      • FFS.. most charging will be done overnight while people sleep and electricity is cheap and under used which will be better for the grid.
      • by DogDude ( 805747 )
        Hey, that's a really interesting idea. I'm sure that nobody in the government has thought about that. Have you considered mentioning that to Parliament?
  • Better be generating that electricity by solar or wind ONLY or you didn't fix anything. Did you check to see if the electric grid can support all those vehicles charging? You do know the electric vehicle lie right? .... you know...you know...producing batteries and disposing of batteries is extremely harmful on the environment, in many ways worse than fossil fuels. You do realize, they use fossil fuel burning portable generators to re-charge your dead batteries on the highway to get you home is just adding

    • Solution: Solar produced hydrogen to replace fossil fuel in fossil fuel burning vehicles. Wake up people!!!

      That is a very bad idea.

      First, solar is shit for energy return on investment. Second, the conversion to hydrogen adds more to the loss. Then there is the losses on getting the energy back out. By the time this is done everyone would have been better off by leaving the solar part out of it and use whatever energy source you had to produce the solar collectors to make the hydrogen. For much of the UK this means natural gas. Which in that case you should probably just use natural gas for fuel in the vehic

      • For places like Spain and the UK the energy return on investment might be negative.

        Well Spain is twice as good for solar as the UK. Might be negative in the UK, but actually, its not. (Google is your friend).

        Wind power is vastly better investment in the UK than any other kind of energy. Projections say we could produce double our needs - and avoid having to buy gas from the Russian Mafia as a side effect (does that explain the Internet propaganda?).

      • My 2Kw high efficiency solar system produces all the power needed to run my house, sadly the feed in fate is only 1/3 of the buy in rate, so I still pay a little.
        Cost was $4K, and payback will be less than 5 years.

    • Seems like you didn't check anything before posting that lot of nonsense and out of date ignorance
    • by Ksevio ( 865461 )
      Electric vehicles are great for grid stability when charged at home. They charge at night when the demand for power is lowest and with smart grids, they can spread out the demand over the night to when power is cheapest.

      Batteries are being recycled and more recycling capabilities are being added. We should be able to get it to the same level as lead-acid batteries.

      The vast majority of people have a commute within electric car range so there's no need for portable generators.
  • This is really a stupid move.
    First, which charger model will you put? Because, sadly, electric cars don't have all the same plug type.
    Also, what does this provide if you decide to get a much more efficient and cleaner fuel cell vehicle instead?

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      Put in a 32A commando (building site) connector. Industry standard, every electric car has an adaptor for them, you can just use caravan adaptors like caravans do.

      Now you also have a generic power point for mowing the lawn, powering a pressure washer etc. just one cheap adaptor away.

      I think it's a stupid idea, just from a peak-load point of view, but your concerns are really the most minor I can think of.

      P.S. My last house, I installed a 32A 220V commando connector deliberately. I used it to mow the lawn,

  • There is a standard, yes?

  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday September 05, 2019 @03:29AM (#59160666) Homepage Journal

    This is not needed. What is needed is a wire run to a box in all new construction. Not a charger. For those who need a dedicated charger they can install one, but there is no excuse for an EV to not be able to charge from an outlet with just an adapter. If they can regen, they already have most of the necessary hardware onboard.

  • And Boris will deliver Brexit do or die.
    So far he lost 100% of all the votes.
    This is just pure stupidity to lure voters.

  • by ledow ( 319597 )

    Tell me when they all come with car parking spaces first, and then I'll believe it.

    And only being in new builds means that they will be incredibly minor - UK builders have nearly stopped construction, and it's been that way for decades. Nobody's paying to build new homes, and what they are building a tiny one-bed studios with no facilities and plasterboard walls.

    Honestly, I've owned a 1930's house, a 1960's house and lived in 70's apartments - because there you actually stand a chance of being able to walk

    • The new-build stuff I see my friends (including key-workers) take on just looks like student accommodation to my eyes. You have families trying to build a home in a flat with hardly any electrical sockets, no substantial walls, pathetic heating capacity, windows that don't open, no aircon, stupid rules on what colour they can have their front door, shared entrances with all the other tenants when they stagger home drunk, and disturbances galore from neighbours in every direction including up and down.

      But

  • I think it's a great idea. I was looking at a used leaf not too long ago, but then realized it would likely cost me three times (or more) the cost of the car to be able to charge it. This because I'm in an older home that will likely need to be entirely re-wired if I try to put in a charging station. The current wiring is barely adequate and no-where near modern codes. To do anything like wiring in a charging station will require an electrician who by law would be required to rewire the place to bring i
  • And a 220v outlet is, what, about $200 installed. They make it sound like this is some massive cost to a new house.

  • You make a law when something so bad, so egregious is happening, that society deems force to be necessary to enforce it.

    Is THIS one of those hills to die on? Laws aren't for good ideas. Is the government of the UK ready to put people in jail over... installing an outlet?

    What the heck?

  • Mandate a ton of different regulations for building the smallest of human dwellings.

    Wonder why so many people are homeless, with too few, too expensive apartments everywhere.

    Politicians creating a crisis they can use to get reelected later on. Today, we're "solving climate change", next decade we're going to "care for all the homeless" (we just created).

  • by wyattstorch516 ( 2624273 ) on Thursday September 05, 2019 @02:12PM (#59162672)
    By the time there are a significant number of homes built with these required chargers, the self driving feature will have been sufficiently developed enough for commercial use. This will inevitably lead to the expanded use of car sharing services and the reduction of car ownership.

    Much like the California bullet train the government is mandating technology that will be obsolete before it is even fully implemented.

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