ATLANTA – As the state prepares to build a network of electric vehicle charging stations across Georgia, the General Assembly is grappling with how they should be operated and how to tax the electricity they sell to EV owners.
Separate bills making their way through the Georgia House and Senate would go a long way toward setting the stage for ending the era of the internal combustion engine and bringing on a new generation of EVs.
“You’re fixing to see a change in this country,” state Rep. Alan Powell, R-Hartwell, said March 1 shortly before House lawmakers unanimously passed their EV bill. “This is to get us prepared for the future.”
House Bill 406, and a Senate EV bill that cleared that chamber’s Regulated Industries Committee the same day, would end the practice of EV owners paying to charge their vehicles based on the time it takes. Instead, they would be charged by the kilowatt-hour.
That’s the most important part of the two bills, said Anne Blair, Atlanta-based senior director of policy for the Washington, D.C.-headquartered Electrification Coalition, a nonpartisan nonprofit working to facilitate the widespread adoption of electric vehicles.
“It will be needed to qualify for federal funding,” she said.
The Georgia Department of Transportation (DOT) is planning to jumpstart the rollout of a network of EV charging stations across the state with $135 million in federal funding through the bipartisan infrastructure bill Congress passed two years ago.
Many of those charging stations likely will be located at convenience stores that already sell gasoline and will transition a portion of their operations to charging electric vehicles.
“Many of them are very interested in getting into the market and selling whatever fuel source is predominant,” Blair said.
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