The Jetsons is the first thing that comes
to mind when I think of electric vehicles, not necessarily a floating utopia
equipped with flying cars, but it’s definitely a wave of the future. With countless manufacturers rolling our
production vehicles and prototypes, it’s not difficult to get lost in the
shuffle. We’ve heard the conversation
around electric vehicles: they’re quiet, cheap to maintain, and environmentally
friendly. Lets delve a bit deeper and
get the actual price of maintaining one.
According to Edmunds: to
figure out the cost of fueling an EV, start with the electric car's energy
consumption rate, which is expressed as kWh per 100 miles (kWh/100m). This
figure will be listed on the EPA's upcoming EV fuel economy label (the 2011
Leaf's preliminary label is shown here,
complete with an erroneous 12-cent per kWh figure in the cost estimate that
Nissan says it is correcting). The next figure is your home electric rate,
assuming that's the primary charging site. Multiply the kWh/100m figure by the
electric rate to get the cost per 100 miles. For instance, the Leaf's kWh/100m
figure is 34. If electricity is 11 cents per kWh — the national average — it
would cost $3.74 to go 100 miles.
Utility
companies, and the time and level of use set the electricity cost. You pay more for kWh at peak hours, making a
lot of electric commuters pay more than the national average of 11 cents per
kWh. How do real individuals save on
their electric vehicles?
Tom
and Cathy Saxon have two electric vehicles.
They installed separate electric meters for their EVs (electric
vehicles) in July 2009 and have been tracking them since then. The Saxton's Tesla is consuming at a rate of
30.8 kWh/100m (bettering its official EPA rating); the RAV4 is averaging about
35 kWh/100m. They pay an average of
11.25 cents per kWh. In other words,
they drive about 30 miles on a dollar’s worth of electricity, it would be much
more expensive to drive with gas.
Results do vary, depending on a couple factors like when and where
you’re charging, but the true cost of filling up is a tad more complicated than
expected.
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