General Motors and travel operator Pilot said on Thursday that they will develop a national network of 2,000 electric vehicle charging stalls at travel centres to make it easier to recharge near the US highways.
The companies said the stations will be co-branded Pilot
Flying J and Ultium Charge 360, powered by EVgo and open to all EV brands at up
to 500 Pilot and Flying J travel centres. The companies did not disclose the
financial investment.
"GM and Pilot Company designed this program to combine
private investments alongside intended government grant and utility programs to
help reduce range anxiety and significantly close the gap in long-distance EV
charger demand," said Pilot Company Chief Executive Officer Shameek Konar.
Last month, the US Transportation Department (USDOT)
proposed minimum standards and requirements for EV charging projects funded
under a $5 billion government program to states.
The Biden administration says states should prioritise
investments along interstate highway, install EV charging infrastructure every
50 miles (nearly 80 km) along interstate highways and be located within 1 mile
(nearly 1.5 km) of highways.
GM and Pilot said the program is targeting installation of
charging stalls at 50-mile intervals. It is part of its GM's previously
announced nearly $750 million investment in EV charging infrastructure.
GM CEO Mary Barra said "the right charging
infrastructure is in place is a key piece" of an all-electric US auto
fleet. The automaker plans eliminate tailpipe emissions from new vehicles by
2035.
GM said earlier it is collaborating with EVgo to build a
network of 3,250 charging stalls in major metro areas by 2025. Pilot recently
announced plans to invest $1 billion to upgrade its travel centres.
By 2030, President Joe Biden wants 50 percent of all new
vehicles sold to be electric or plug-in hybrid electric models and 500,000 new
EV charging stations; he has not endorsed phasing out new gasoline-powered
vehicle sales by 2030. © Reuters