Electric vehicles during a disaster

   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #171  
Just to clarify, the actual request was not to charge electric vehicles during peak demand times, e.g. 5-8pm. As indicated elsewhere electric vehicle owners tend to charge whenever the rates are at the lowest, I.e. the middle of the night. I can't recall ever having charged during peak times.

Bottom line: this was a non-issue for electric vehicle owners.

We made a chunk of change last night exporting power from our batteries to the grid because of the high demand. ($2.k/Wh) I expect this sort of export in times of grid need to become more common with increasing home battery installations, and more electric vehicles that have bidirectional chargers that can export power. Of course, with time, I expect the price to drop a little, but not much. The price paid was the spot price for power last night.

All the best,

Peter



Peter, don’t you dare pull this group’s sound byte away. “California said don’t charge EVs.” You have to eliminate the rest of the information for better click bait.

The times I’ve needed to charge during peak are slim to never.

Very cool on the $2/kwh

Crossed 30,000miles this am on the EV, will hit 40k miles in the 1st year of ownership. Never a public charger, never ran out of charge. I must be doing it wrong with all these problems out there.
 
   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #172  
Around here as far as I know there is no peak/off peak electric rates. Maybe in town.
 
   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #173  
Someone double check my math. This is what would happen if we transitioned from ice to EVs. In other words, all ice vehicles replaced with electric. Of course this doesn't include tractors, heavy equipment, mowers, etc. Just cars & trucks AND at present usage. In the future of course (2035?) numbers would be higher.

EVs consume an average of 0.35 kilowatt-hours (kWh) per mile driven (cars).
290.8 million registered vehicles in USA in 2022
Average yearly miles driven 14,263 miles
Electricity usage in USA 3,995 TWh (in 2021)
(1TWh=1billion kWh)
1,451,688,140,000 kWh (USA vehicles miles driven average rate times average electric power consumption...cars only.
Therefore = 1,451 TWh at CAR rate: however, if you factor in truck usage which is 1.89 kWh/mile.
Of the 290.8 million vehicles registered in USA, 156 million are trucks!
So...back to the drawing board!
134.8 million cars+156 million trucks
134,800,000 at (.35×14,263)=4,992.05 kWh
156,000,000 at (1.89×14,263)=26,957.07 kWh
Cars: 672,928,340,000 kWh
Trucks: 4,205,302,920,000 kWh
Total: 4,878,231,260,000 kWh
Total: 4,878.23126 TWh
Therefore grid system would have to be more than doubled to meet demand.
 
   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #174  
Peak vs off-peak electric rates. That must be a feature in larger urban areas. Here - it's the same 24/7/365.
 
   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #175  
Someone double check my math. This is what would happen if we transitioned from ice to EVs. In other words, all ice vehicles replaced with electric. Of course this doesn't include tractors, heavy equipment, mowers, etc. Just cars & trucks AND at present usage. In the future of course (2035?) numbers would be higher.

EVs consume an average of 0.35 kilowatt-hours (kWh) per mile driven (cars).
290.8 million registered vehicles in USA in 2022
Average yearly miles driven 14,263 miles
Electricity usage in USA 3,995 TWh (in 2021)
(1TWh=1billion kWh)
1,451,688,140,000 kWh (USA vehicles miles driven average rate times average electric power consumption...cars only.
Therefore = 1,451 TWh at CAR rate: however, if you factor in truck usage which is 1.89 kWh/mile.
Of the 290.8 million vehicles registered in USA, 156 million are trucks!
So...back to the drawing board!
134.8 million cars+156 million trucks
134,800,000 at (.35×14,263)=4,992.05 kWh
156,000,000 at (1.89×14,263)=26,957.07 kWh
Cars: 672,928,340,000 kWh
Trucks: 4,205,302,920,000 kWh
Total: 4,878,231,260,000 kWh
Total: 4,878.23126 TWh
Therefore grid system would have to be more than doubled to meet demand.

Lot of power.

I’m not in the EV replace all vehicles camp, I find that unrealistic even though I think they would be fine for a majority of commuters.

From your numbers I gleam a more than double consumption/generation. Doesn’t directly relate to grid/production ability shortcomings (double consumption doesn’t equal double capacity required). That would be an interesting study.
 
   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #176  
Remember in college where all the kids in a dorm would get together and flush their toilets all at once at the exact same time? Often resulted in poop on the floor in the lowest levels.
 
   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #177  
Our local electric company is offering off-peak charging for EVs at 45% off the regular price of electricity between the hours of 11PM and 6AM. Plus a $500 rebate once you set it up. Applies to people that already have chargers installed, too.


The other major electric company in the area, as far as I can tell, only offers off-peak to non-residential customers.
 
   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #178  
Our local electric company is offering off-peak charging for EVs at 45% off the regular price of electricity between the hours of 11PM and 6AM. Plus a $500 rebate once you set it up. Applies to people that already have chargers installed, too.


The other major electric company in the area, as far as I can tell, only offers off-peak to non-residential customers.
Applies to their Indiana customers as well...

 
   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #179  
Remember in college where all the kids in a dorm would get together and flush their toilets all at once at the exact same time? Often resulted in poop on the floor in the lowest levels.
I made a toilet discovery (I was always instigating something ). Remember those huge toilet paper rolls they used to have in the 70s? They must have been 2ft diameter. One day I discovered if you pulled a few feet of paper out and put it in commode water then flushed, the toilet would continue to flush until that huge roll was empty, leaving that center roll spinning about 5000 rpm.
I showed it to someone then it was all over, you'd hear toilets running for several minutes and no more paper!
I've never figured out why it would do that.
 
   / Electric vehicles during a disaster #180  
I made a toilet discovery (I was always instigating something ). Remember those huge toilet paper rolls they used to have in the 70s? They must have been 2ft diameter. One day I discovered if you pulled a few feet of paper out and put it in commode water then flushed, the toilet would continue to flush until that huge roll was empty, leaving that center roll spinning about 5000 rpm.
I showed it to someone then it was all over, you'd hear toilets running for several minutes and no more paper!
I've never figured out why it would do that.
Strong paper, I guess. I can see that it would cause a siphon effect, but the valve should shut off after the water pressure drops, assuming a normal valve like a Sloan or such.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

(4) Texas Built 25' Stand Alone Panels (A50515)
(4) Texas Built...
2000 CUSTOM 16' HOMEMADE CAR TRAILER (A51222)
2000 CUSTOM 16'...
Pickup Instructions (A47384)
Pickup...
2018 CHEVROLET SILVERADO TRUCK (A51243)
2018 CHEVROLET...
2025 12V Diesel Pump and Hose with Meter (A50324)
2025 12V Diesel...
Unused 2025 CFG Industrial MY50R Mini Excavator (A50322)
Unused 2025 CFG...
 
Top