Dingbatt:
Just got an email from Chargenet introducing their new tariffs (effective 30 Nov 22). For the ones that matter, 80c/kWh for fast DC charging (25-75kW - they call it “destination”) with no per minute fee anymore, and 85c/kWh for Ultra fast DC charging (76+kW - “enroute”). Then $1/min idle fees.
So effectively the same price as Tesla SCs now.
I wonder if Genesis’ lower rate EVerywhere plan will still apply?
Interesting.
With the advent of more capacity-sharing chargers, time based fees are less viable.
However the original point of time-based charges was to ensure that the chargenet got reasonable rent from the charger in the event it was used for very slow charging (i.e. charging an outlander PHEV, or charging a leaf from 80% to 98%. [edit] - it might not matter. It isn't going to be worthwhile l to charge a PHEV at 80c 85c/kWh (cost would be similar to running on petrol), and that price will deter other frivolous charging on any EV.
Not sure if I like the names. AC chargers are frequently used during the day, and 25 - 75kW chargers are frequently used on route (many of our current EV fleet can't charge faster than 75kW anyway).
And it seems kinda pointless having different fees for the 76kW+ chargers to the 25- 75kW. The difference between 80c and 85c is too small to justify the extra complexity in the pricing structure.
Overall the price increase is massive (42% at the hyperchargers). I think it is the first price increase charge.net has done in its entire history, so not really that bad, but quite a shock all at once.
And all companies need to move from a loss-making growth phase to a sustainable pricing phase at some point. And those fast chargers aren't cheap to buy.