New Jersey watchdog agency says utilities can’t invest ratepayer money in EVSENew Jersey watchdog agency says utilities can’t invest ratepayer money in EVSE

New Jersey’s Division of Rate Counsel, a state agency charged with representing the interests of ratepayers in dealing with regulated utilities, is seeking to block two companies from spending hundreds of millions of ratepayer dollars on EV infrastructure projects.

In separate filings with the New Jersey Board of Public
Utilities, Division Director Stefanie Brand is asking the agency to dismiss
proposals by Public Service Electric & Gas and Atlantic City Electric to
invest $364 million and $42 million to build out charging infrastructure in
their respective territories.

“There is no legal authority for what [the utilities] are asking,’’ Brand told NJ Spotlight. “Other than tapping a special clean energy fund for ‘rebates to help motorists buy electric vehicles,’ the PIV Act does not authorize or direct the [Board of Public Utilities] to allow the investment of any ratepayer funds on its implementation.”

The agency’s could set the stage for a conflict with Governor
Phil Murphy and state legislators, which recently passed a package of pro-EV measures,
including several EVSE-related mandates.

The disagreement is not over whether the infrastructure
should be built, but over how it should be financed, and the debate was ongoing
during the time the pro-EV bills (Assembly Bill 4819 and Senate Bill 2252) made
their way through the Legislature.

The question of what role utilities should play in building
out charging infrastructure has also surfaced in other states. In 2016, the
California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) put the brakes on
Pacific Gas & Electric’s plans to build 25,100 charging stations
using
$654 million in ratepayer dollars. California now has a law that’s designed to requires
utilities to invest in EV charging infrastructure in a way that leverages
private-sector funding, protects competition and allows consumers choices.

The argument against ratepayer-financed EVSE projects of
this kind is that utilities are using ratepayer money to unfairly compete with private-sector
charging operators. “PSE&G’s program would use ratepayer funds to allow
PSE&G to undercut competitors, eliminating their ability to provide those
services at competitive prices without ratepayer funding,’’ reads the Rate
Counsel’s filing.

The two New Jersey utilities pushed back against the Rate
Counsel’s challenge. Atlantic City Electric says it is confident “that the EV
programs we have proposed are entirely consistent with the legislation signed
into law earlier this year and are critical to helping New Jersey meeting its
environmental goals.’’

A PSE&G spokesman said, “Rather than undermining
competing EV service providers, PSE&G is seeking to be the charging
provider of last resort to ensure that markets underserved by private
providers, like low-income communities, have access to EV charging.”

Source: NJ Spotlight

New Jersey’s Division of Rate Counsel, a state agency charged with representing the interests of ratepayers in dealing with regulated utilities, is seeking to block two companies from spending hundreds of millions of ratepayer dollars on EV infrastructure projects. In separate filings with the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities, Division Director Stefanie Brand is… Read more »

New Jersey’s Division of Rate Counsel, a state agency charged with representing the interests of ratepayers in dealing with regulated utilities, is seeking to block two companies from spending hundreds of millions of ratepayer dollars on EV infrastructure projects.

In separate filings with the New Jersey Board of Public
Utilities, Division Director Stefanie Brand is asking the agency to dismiss
proposals by Public Service Electric & Gas and Atlantic City Electric to
invest $364 million and $42 million to build out charging infrastructure in
their respective territories.

“There is no legal authority for what [the utilities] are asking,’’ Brand told NJ Spotlight. “Other than tapping a special clean energy fund for ‘rebates to help motorists buy electric vehicles,’ the PIV Act does not authorize or direct the [Board of Public Utilities] to allow the investment of any ratepayer funds on its implementation.”

The agency’s could set the stage for a conflict with Governor
Phil Murphy and state legislators, which recently passed a package of pro-EV measures,
including several EVSE-related mandates.

The disagreement is not over whether the infrastructure
should be built, but over how it should be financed, and the debate was ongoing
during the time the pro-EV bills (Assembly Bill 4819 and Senate Bill 2252) made
their way through the Legislature.

The question of what role utilities should play in building
out charging infrastructure has also surfaced in other states. In 2016, the
California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) put the brakes on
Pacific Gas & Electric’s plans to build 25,100 charging stations
using
$654 million in ratepayer dollars. California now has a law that’s designed to requires
utilities to invest in EV charging infrastructure in a way that leverages
private-sector funding, protects competition and allows consumers choices.

The argument against ratepayer-financed EVSE projects of
this kind is that utilities are using ratepayer money to unfairly compete with private-sector
charging operators. “PSE&G’s program would use ratepayer funds to allow
PSE&G to undercut competitors, eliminating their ability to provide those
services at competitive prices without ratepayer funding,’’ reads the Rate
Counsel’s filing.

The two New Jersey utilities pushed back against the Rate
Counsel’s challenge. Atlantic City Electric says it is confident “that the EV
programs we have proposed are entirely consistent with the legislation signed
into law earlier this year and are critical to helping New Jersey meeting its
environmental goals.’’

A PSE&G spokesman said, “Rather than undermining
competing EV service providers, PSE&G is seeking to be the charging
provider of last resort to ensure that markets underserved by private
providers, like low-income communities, have access to EV charging.”

Source: NJ Spotlight

New Jersey’s Division of Rate Counsel, a state agency charged with representing the interests of ratepayers in dealing with regulated utilities, is seeking to block two companies from spending hundreds of millions of ratepayer dollars on EV infrastructure projects. In separate filings with the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities, Division Director Stefanie Brand is… Read more »