Michael Dwyer’s Post

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Lead Transportation Modeler at U.S. Energy Information Administration. All views are my own.

ICYMI, folks in EIA's Office of Energy Statistics maintain an historical time series of scrubbed/aggregated U.S. EV charging infrastructure data (raw data source: DOE AFDC). It is updated monthly and is published as Appendix F in the Monthly Energy Review (https://lnkd.in/emXaQ6t2). The microdata file (zip) is available for download at the link.

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Rajiv Diwan

Car guy, ensuring the shift to EV's is seamless and that fast charging is reliable, accessible, and affordable for all.

6mo

Michael Dwyer is there a way to see a more granular view based on kw speed for DCFC? All too often the numbers are being taken/cited at the aggregate level, which is very misleading. Without a view of 150kw and other higher ratings it is very difficult to structure analysis. NREL’s recent report cited that the number of Non-Tesla >150kw is only ~5,500, and also noted their assumption is that 350kw is precedent by 2030.

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