Archive for February 22nd, 2010

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Vehicle-to-grid income and analysis

February 22, 2010

Michael Giberson

If you are already a rock star and can’t imagine doing anything else, then “money for nothing and your chicks for free” may be a reasonable characterization of your situation.  On the other hand, if you’re a teenage boy picking up a guitar and hoping to attain wealth and women, you should consider the start-up costs involved.  Some discussions of “vehicle-to-grid” (V2G) revenue potential seem a bit like the “money for nothing and your chicks for free” kind of analysis.

Consider the Financial Times article, “Grids to Harness Power of Electric Cars,” a story that builds on recent V2G presentations at the American Association for the Advancement of Science meetings in San Diego.

The first experimental V2G system has just gone live at the University of Delaware, where three electric cars are connected to the grid whenever they are not being driven. “They are making five to ten dollars a day just by being plugged in,” said Kenneth Huber, technology manager for the PJM grid, which covers the mid-Atlantic states.

The two-way connection not only pulls in power to recharge the battery but also sends electricity back to the grid. V2G vehicles work like an electrical sponge, absorbing excess energy when demand for power is low, and returning some to the grid when demand is high, said Willett Kempton, project leader at the University of Delaware.

…  Prof Kempton says his project suggests that an investment in V2G technology could pay off very fast for an electric car owner. Once the technology is commercialised, the additional costs of fitting a V2G-enabled battery and charging system would be about $1,500 – and the owner could make $3,000 a year through a load-balancing contract with the grid.

V2G is economically viable because electric car owners are buying batteries anyway, so it makes sense to use them for communal energy storage. It would be much more costly for electric grids to install stationary battery banks or other storage systems dedicated to load balancing.

It is dangerous to leap to conclusions based on a newspaper summary of research, but the characterization above suggests that a few assumptions may be key.  The assumption that “electric car owners are buying batteries anyway” may mean that the V2G analysis treats the battery as a free resource, and so compares V2G revenue estimates just to the incremental costs of V2G capability and operations.

I suppose it is a perfectly reasonable assumption for anyone who is going to buy an electric car anyway, and then is considering adding V2G capability. If, on the other hand, the intention is to advocate V2G revenue possibilities as an inducement to buy the electric car in the first place, a more inclusive analysis seems reasonable.

(For more on Dire Straits, “Money for nothing”: YouTube, Songfacts.)

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Local politician threatens to file price gouging claims against gasoline retailers opposing tax

February 22, 2010

Michael Giberson

From the Fredericksburg, VA, Free Lance-Star, “GAS-TAX PINCH OR GOUGING?“:

Spotsylvania County Supervisor Hap Connors threatened yesterday to file price-gouging complaints because of a lobbying association’s campaign that blames a Virginia Railway Express tax for increased gas prices.

The county became a member of the commuter rail service Monday and enacted a 2.1 percent tax on wholesale gasoline required for VRE membership. The tax is expected to generate more than $3 million annually.

… The Virginia Petroleum, Convenience and Grocery Association represents 650 retail members operating more than 4,500 convenience and grocery stores with gas pumps across Virginia.

Association spokesman Michael O’Connor said the group made laminated signs for Spotsylvania members that warn county residents they will pay 5 cents more a gallon because of the tax.

“Either the gasoline retailer will have to eat that 5 cents or it is going to be passed on to the consumer,” O’Connor said.

Supervisor Connors sent O’Connor an e-mail yesterday warning that he would file price-gouging complaints if O’Connor did not remove the signs.

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