Ecotricity to start charging for charging

Ecotricity to start charging for charging

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anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Thursday 7th July 2016
quotequote all
It had to happen sometime I suppose

£5 for 20 mins charging

Just got the email

I’m writing to you as a member of the Electric Highway to let you know of a significant change to our service.

After five years of providing charging for free, we’re moving to a ‘charging for charging’ model.

When we began in July 2011, there was a bit of a chicken and egg situation – people were reluctant to buy electric cars because there were no charging facilities being built, but nobody wanted to build those facilities while there were still so few cars on the road. That’s when we jumped in to help kickstart the electric car revolution in Britain.

And that’s going pretty well: today there are over 40 models to choose from and 64,000 plug-ins on the road. The Electric Highway itself comprises almost 300 electricity pumps – of the fast charging variety.

The combination of more cars on the road and faster charging means we're now delivering two million miles of clean driving each month – all powered from the wind and sun. That’s a great result. It’s also a growing cost. And to keep pace with demand, we need to build more electricity pumps – at existing and new locations.

So the time has come for us to charge – for charging.

We’ve taken a lot of feedback from EV drivers in order to arrive at the right pricing model. We’ve decided that a simple flat fee of a fiver for a 20 minute fast charge strikes the right balance.

Here’s how it will all work and when it will all happen

First, we’ve created an Electric Highway app. You’ll need this app to use our pumps once we’ve changed over to the ‘charging for charging’ model.

The app will have other features that you’ll find useful. It will show you a live feed of our entire network so you can see the location and availability of your nearest pump, making it easier for you to plan your journeys. You’ll be able to track the progress of your charge with the app’s charging countdown, and there’ll be other features coming in the future.

The transition to ‘charging for charging’ will require a hardware upgrade of each pump. We’ll start that work on Monday 11 July and we’re aiming to have the entire network finished by Friday 5 August.

During this transition period, you’ll need the app for some pumps and your swipe card for others. The app itself will tell you which pumps have switched over to the new charging model.

Once the work is complete, our entire network will only be usable through the Electric Highway app.

We’ve updated the FAQs on the Ecotricity website to provide more information, should you need it.

I hope this is all clear and that you’ll understand our need to finally move to ‘charging for charging’ – it’s the next vital step in the evolution of the Electric Highway and it will allow us to continue to reinvest in improving and expanding the network.

Viva the EV revolution smile

Thanks for being with us.

Dale Vince

P.S. Nearly forgot ... the Electric Highway will still be free to use for Ecotricity energy customers – so if you’re not already a customer, now is a pretty good time to switch. You’ll not only get free use of the Electric Highway, we’ll give you a discount on your energy just for having an electric car.

It is on the website too https://www.ecotricity.co.uk/for-the-road

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Thursday 7th July 2016
quotequote all
essayer said:
Ahh I guess they had to start charging but £5 for 20 minutes isn't enough time really.
Whats that about 12KW - 40p per kWh? after handshaking etc? 50 miles in a ZOE. Too expensive.
I agree. It does look expensive in terms of £/mile £/kWh



anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Thursday 7th July 2016
quotequote all
essayer said:
I got the maths wrong - a non rapid charge ZOE will draw 22kWh so that's £5 for 28 miles frown

Fine for occasional use I suppose
You got the maths wrong this time!

My Zoe would take 40% charge in 20 minutes. 40% would get me ~50 miles easily on a warm day

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Tuesday 12th July 2016
quotequote all
IN51GHT said:
I charge overnight at home, then 15mins during the day, that covers me for my 150mile a day useage so that's not going to work.
Switch your home electricity to ecotricity, then the chargers are free

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Friday 15th July 2016
quotequote all
IN51GHT said:
I do, but the reality is that the DBT chargers do not (& can not) facilitate this, so my suggestion is based on what's possible, not what's desirable.

There is an up side (for me) to this.

I now do not have my usual 15min top up on the way to work, I wait until on my way home & will take the full 30mins I'm paying for with my £6.

The up side is that I arrive at work 15mins earlier, so the £6 it costs me to charge in the evening is more than covered by the extra 15mins pay I get in the morning.
Offset by getting home 30 mins later every day

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Wednesday 4th September 2019
quotequote all
Price going up from 30p / kWh to 39p / kWh in 30 days...

https://twitter.com/DaleVince/status/1169215541250...