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Feds Finish New Rules for the EV Chargers They Fund

All of the electric vehicle chargers that are funded through the federal government must now be assembled in the United States, the Department of Transportation announced Wednesday.

electric vehicles charging
(TNS) — All electric vehicle chargers funded through the federal government must be assembled in the United States, the Department of Transportation announced Wednesday.

The final guidance from the Federal Highway Administration also requires all iron and steel charger enclosures be manufactured in the United States, Biden administration officials said. By July 2024, at least 55% of the cost of all components will also need to be built in the United States.

It's the latest in the administration's plan to build a network of EV chargers along the nation's major highways, an approach aimed at easing drivers' fears that they won't be able to go long distances in zero-emission vehicles.

It also aligns with a former proposal from the FHWA that would phase-in requirements for charger components, giving companies until mid-2023 to build chargers with at least 25% of the cost coming from U.S.-made components if they want federal funding and ramp up to 55% in 2024.

Thirteen companies told FHWA they could build chargers that fit the requirements, but only three — ChargePoint, FreeWire Technologies Inc. and Rhombus — said they could build fast chargers. Industry experts said demand for chargers already is outpacing supply, and funding for the national charging network will only exacerbate that.

Charging companies, however, pushed FHWA to go beyond their initial proposal by delaying the implementation of the requirements until at least 2024.

A full waiver of Buy America rules remained in effect as FHWA shaped the final rule.

The infrastructure law enacted in 2021 appropriated $5 billion for the charging network. The government will pay up to 80% of the cost of installing chargers along designated "alternative fuel corridors" in the states. Michigan is expected to receive $110 million through the program.

Michigan's alternative fuel corridors include:

— Interstate 275 from Interstate 696 south to Interstate 75

— I-696 from Interstate 94 in Macomb County west to I-275

— Extending an existing alternative fuel corridor on I-94 from Detroit to the Blue Water Bridge

— US-31 from Manistee heading northeast to US-131

— US-131 from Petoskey north to the Mackinac Bridge

— US-2 from the Mackinac Bridge west to Wisconsin

— US-127 from Roscommon south to Jackson

The Department of Energy also announced $7.4 million in funding for medium- and heavy-duty EV charging projects across 23 states on Wednesday.

© 2023 The Detroit News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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