Singapore to install Two,000 charging points islandwide for electrical cars

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Singapore will install Two,000 charging points across the island to boost its electrical car-sharing programme, the country’s Transport Minister Khaw Boon Wan announced in Parliament on Monday.

Details of the locations of the charging points, and when these will be launched, have not been exposed. However, the minister said the scheme is now in the “final stages of evaluation».

The electrical car-sharing programme aims to introduce 1,000 EVs and the charging infrastructure necessary to support their use.

«We encourage the use of vehicles that are more environmentally-friendly, including electrical cars. We incentivise low carbon emissions cars through the Carbon Emissions-based Vehicle Scheme (CEVS), which is outcome-based and neutral with respect to the type of technology,» Khaw said in reply to Member of Parliament Er Dr Eee Bee Wah`s question on the ministry`s position on the use of electrical cars.

Khaw said the final proposal presently being evaluated resulted from a Request for Information (RFI) issued by the Land Transport Authority (LTA) and Economic Development Board (EDB) inviting proposals for such a programme.

According to the RFI, up to twenty per cent of the proposed Two,000 points may be accessible to non-participants of the car-sharing scheme. This means that private owners of EVs can also use some of the charging stations to juice their rail.

We encourage the use of vehicles that are more environmentally-friendly, including electrical cars.

Khaw Boon Wan, Transport Minister, Singapore

Maximum rebates for EV owners

The ministry reiterated its promise of rewarding EV owners in terms of carbon rebates.

For example, the LTA gave a carbon rebate of $20,000 to an electrified Peugeot Ion (a subcompact hatchback) and $30,000 each to a BMW i3 hatchback and i8 plug-in hybrid after these cars passed the tests on CO2 emissions for the tens unit generated to charge these cars.

Er Dr Lee asked in particular about whether Tesla’s fresh Model three would qualify for tax incentives, after a Singaporean Internet search rock hard executive who purchased a used Tesla Model S in March, was given a $15,000 surcharge instead of getting a rebate.

Khaw clarified that the Model three was launched in the United States on March 31, but “only a prototype was displayed”. “When it is ready to be sold in Singapore, importers will submit its electrical energy consumption information for LTA to assess if it will attract a rebate or a surcharge,” he said.

“If it is as energy-efficient as a fresh Tesla S, a fresh Tesla three car would be entitled to the maximum rebate under our current CEVS.”

EV on quick lane

The number of charging points the ministry plans to set up presents a dramatic 20-fold increase from what is presently available.

According to LTA data, there are only about one hundred charging points in commercial and residential buildings as well as public places all over Singapore today servicing some one hundred twenty electrical and plug-in hybrid vehicles.

Terence Siew, product manager at Greenlots, a home-grown charging solutions rigid, said Two,000 charging points for an initial fleet of 1,000 EVs is a «good ratio to embark with».

Such numbers suggest the little crimson dot is solidly paving the way for more green cars. But that’s not all: commuters may also be railing EV buses in the near future.

When asked by another MP, Sun Xueling, on whether or not the Government would consider using electrical vehicles for public transport, citing London`s launch of a fleet of battery-powered double-decker buses in March, Khaw said: «Yes. We will attempt to make use of all this fresh technology.»

Earlier this year, London spinned out a fleet of five double-decker EV buses that transported people to touristy areas.

«All that said, the greenest form of transport is public transport,” said Khaw. “Even tho’ electrical cars produce no tailpipe emissions, the process of generating the electric current they consume emits carbon. We must budge towards a car-lite society.”

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