Feds award $521 million in EV charger funds, but rollout remains slow
Briefly

"Today's investments in public community charging fill crucial gaps and provide the foundation for a zero-emission future where everyone can choose to ride or drive electric for greater individual convenience and reduced fueling costs, as well as cleaner air and lower healthcare costs for all Americans," said Gabe Kline, executive director of the Joint Office of Energy and Transportation.
The federal government awarded another $521 million in EV charger funding today. It's the latest tranche of money to be awarded from a $7.5 billion program authorized by the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, which aims to build out fast chargers along interstate highways as well as bringing charging infrastructure to underserved communities.
The Biden administration set a goal of 500,000 EV chargers nationwide by 2030. The Joint Office's latest data shows more than 189,000 chargers across the country, although fewer than 44,000 of these were DC fast chargers.
But it cites real improvements over the past few years-56 percent of the most heavily trafficked highways have a fast charger every 50 miles, up from 38 percent in January 2021.
Read at Ars Technica
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