0 to 180 km in 10 minutes: B.C. Hydro rolls out faster electric vehicle charging stations - Action News
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British Columbia

0 to 180 km in 10 minutes: B.C. Hydro rolls out faster electric vehicle charging stations

Surrey, Tumbler Ridge and Mackenzie are the first communities to get the stations, which can add 180 km in 10 minutes, power provider says.

Surrey, Manning Park, Tumbler Ridge, Mackenzie getting stations that can add up to 180 km range in 10 minutes

A car sits at a charging station.
This electric vehicle charging station in McLeod Lake, B.C., is one of just a handful of fast-charge locations available to drivers north of Prince George. B.C. Hydro says it is adding a wider range of options to drivers in rural locations starting this fall. (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

B.C. Hydro has unveiledplans to install newcharging stations it sayscan add as much as 180 kilometresworth of rangeto the average electric vehiclein 10 minutes.

The utility says the new 180-kilowatt units will be added to its network as soon as this fall, with even more scheduled to arrive in 2024.

The first communities to get the new faster-charge stations are Surrey, Manning Park and,north of Prince George, Mackenzie and Tumbler Ridge.

B.C. Hydro president Chris O'Riley says both current and prospective electric vehicle owners have said they want improved coverage in more rural parts of the province in order to address range anxiety.

"We are listening to feedback from our customers," he said.

The new stations will also be the first from B.C. Hydro to offer power sharing, which lets two different vehicles use the same unit to charge at the same time.

The adoption of electric vehicles in B.C. is much higher in southern urban areas than rural, northern ones, according to statistics from the provincial government made available in 2022.

The figures showed aboutone in every 45 people ownsa zero-emission vehicle in the southwest regions of the province, but that number drops to one in 232 in the Kootenays and one in 414 in northern B.C.

A map showing charging station distribution in different regions of the province.
An analysis from the non-profit Community Energy Association found the distribution of charge stations in B.C. is heavily weighted toward Metro Vancouver, decreasing the odds that consumers will adopt them in more rural and northern areas. (Community Energy Association)

The numberof public charging stations closely corresponds to the number of zero-emission vehicles in various regions.

The Vancouver areahas more than 500fast-charging ports, according to ChargeHub,a website that tracks charging stations in North America.

In contrast, the route from Prince George to Fort Nelson via Dawson Creek along Highway 97 a distance of more than 800 kilometres has just three locations where a vehicle can be charged to 80 per cent power in an hour or less, creating challenges for people hoping to travel the route.

The disparity is also clear in a just-published analysis from thenon-profit Community Energy Association, which acts as an advisory group to government associations.

It found that while there is roughly one charging port every three square kilometresin Metro Vancouver, the number drops to one every 250 square kilometresin the Regional District of East Kootenay and one every 3,500 square kilometresin the Peace River Regional District, in the province's northeast.

"The more infrastructure we can get across the region ... the more the adoption of electric vehicles will increase," said the association's director of transportation initiatives, Danielle Weiss.

"We are excited to hear that B.C. Hydro is also viewing rural areas as a key focus for their new, enhanced charging technology."

B.C. Hydro says it currently has 153 charging units at 84 locations across the province with plans to add an additional 3,000 ports over the next 10 years.

With files from Brendan Coulter and Maham Hashmi