The United States passed an important electric vehicle milestone earlier this year. At some point during the first three months of 2021, the country installed its 100, 000th EV charger. That’s according to the US ALL Department of Energy’s Alternative Fueling Station Locator, an extremely helpful resource that tracks “ethanol (E85), biodiesel, compressed natural gas, electric vehicle (EV) charging, hydrogen, liquefied natural gas, and propane stations. ”
That milestone coincided nicely with a call from President Joe Biden to build out more EV charging infrastructure. In March of this year, the particular Biden administration set a goal of reaching 500, 000 publicly accessible EV chargers by the year 2030. (This preceded an August announcement from the White House that set a lukewarm target of half of all new cars and trucks being zero-emissions, also by 2030. )
Of course , the actual composition of those chargers is important. It’s no good having half a million places to plug in if they’re all level 1 (120 V AC) chargers that take days to top up the battery EV. But a new report from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory has dug into the data, looking at trends to see whether the nation is on track to meet its goals.