Jon Steward:
I'd ask a few of questions.
1. How are their customers going to cope when the overloaded grid start switching of supplies?
2. When it's finally discovered that we only have natural climate change and the sea levels are not rising and CO2 is not an issue and we can use our fossil fuels. What then?
3. When will it be possible to afford an Electric vehicle for the average person?
1. The National Grid aren't worried about the increased load. Lots of other people keep saying that the grid is going to fail, but not the people who are actually running it. We've been buying so many energy-efficient appliances in recent years, that the total load has gone down a bit. If it goes up again as we switch to EVs, the grid will cope. No big deal.
2. Wishful thinking, ignoring the science, and the evidence all around us.
3. Give it a few years. Batteries keep coming down in price. But there's still a shortage of them. It's already the case that if you look at the total running cost over the lifetime of the vehicle, then EVs are cheaper. But the up-front cost of buying one is still high.
Simon Barker:
3. Give it a few years. Batteries keep coming down in price. But there's still a shortage of them. It's already the case that if you look at the total running cost over the lifetime of the vehicle, then EVs are cheaper. But the up-front cost of buying one is still high.
The lifetime cost is entirely dependent upon doing a fairly high mileage because taxation on the fuel is very much lower. The sums certainly don't work for me.
Back to the OP. Please ask whether there should be a move towards 3-phase domestic supplies on the basis that (1) it may be easier to deal with a lost neutral and (2) more powerful charging would be available.
Load management? Why, that is the question. Are they expecting EV charging to be restricted? Why should the consumer pay for this?
I am already aware that the company is moving away from products that rely on the installation of earth electrodes in PME situations
AJJewsbury:I am already aware that the company is moving away from products that rely on the installation of earth electrodes in PME situations
I'd ask what their position is for charging electric camper vans.
Since the law appears to define a camper van as a kind of "caravan" and the ESQCR prohibits the use of PME for caravans, it would seem it wouldn't be lawful to use their "PME switching" products to charge an EV camper van. (Even if the duty to comply is technically on the DNO rather than the consumer, the DNO might feel obliged to discontinue the supply or earthing facility to the consumer, which amounts to the same result.)
Would they recommend reversion to the TT island approach, be lobbying their MPs for a revision to the ESQCR or be supplying stickers with their EVSE saying "Not suitable for charging electric camper vans"?
- Andy,
The ESQCR prohibits the supplier from connecting a PME supply to a caravan. It says nothing about a consumer choosing to plug their motorhome into a 13A socket. For that reason, perhaps it's best to keep ESQCR as it is, to avoid endless insurmountable problems brought on by over-zealous regulations.
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