Skip to main content

Energy management is key however many EV chargers you have, says Xendee

However many EV chargers you have in your project, you should consider using an energy management platform, says Joshua Goldman, VP of mobility at Xendee.
By Adam Hill July 10, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
The number of EVs on US roads is expected to reach 26.4 million in 2030. Image: © Georgesheldon/Dreamstime

“You may not need one today – but as you scale up, you’ll wish you had it in your future programmes,” he told the online audience at the EV Charging 101 virtual conference.

The number of EVs on US roads is expected to reach 26.4 million in 2030 and while increased market penetration of EVs is an exciting step towards sustainability, the current electric grid cannot meet US needs – especially in remote locations, he suggests.

Key challenges include inadequate charging power, charging ‘deserts’ from lack of availability leading to the potential for high utility costs, not to mention lengthy interconnection times and massive demand charges.

“When you’re planning EV infrastructure for large-scale deployments, you want to look at what your utility is from an inter-connection capacity – and start those conversations as soon as you first think about what you want to deploy,” Goldman explains. “They can hopefully tell you what capacity is between this site you’re looking at or multiple sites you may have to consider.”

You can then plan out the EV charging in terms of space, accesibility and usability, and bring in tax breaks, incentives and rebates to help with funding the equipment. 

“As a business you may then have sustainability goals, greenhouse gas and other carbon emissions reductions that you’ve stated privately or publicly that these systems can help you address, both from upstream emissions… as well as the emission reductions you can have from local microgrid installs at your site,” he says.

There may be opportunities for on-site generation and storage, and even the capacity to export power yourself.

Managed charging can give your EV fleet great optimization, cost reduction, the ability to think about renewable integration and improve battery health of vehicles.

Related Content

  • First NEVI funded EV charging station opens in Utah
    July 10, 2024
    The Joint Office of Energy and Transportation (Joint Office) has announced the opening of the first EV charging station in Utah funded by the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) Formula Program.
  • Collaboration essential for future EV growth, EPRI testifies to Congress
    August 6, 2024
    The electrification of the US transportation sector is an unprecedented challenge and collaboration will be critical to meet future EV needs.
  • Copyright Policy
    October 6, 2022

    What's covered by this policy
    This website code is ©H2 Digital and the website concept is ©Route One Publishing Ltd.

    The editorial content of EVC&I, Electric Vehicle Charging and Infrastructure, Global Highways, Daily News and ITS International brands are the copyright of ©Route One Publishing Ltd.

    Copyright material includes but is not limited to editorial articles, photographs, images, databases, website designs, and website code published on our websites or in our magazines.

  • Dawsongroup partners with VEV to open clean energy fleet electrification facility
    March 20, 2025
    e-fleet solutions provider VEV - which is backed by energy sector company Vitol – has partnered with UK commercial van rental business Dawsongroup to unveil a clean energy fleet electrification facility in Milton Keynes, UK.