First, a little background. In many states, EV charging companies are forbidden to charge customers for the amount of electricity used, they must bill on a per minute basis. The problem is, utility companies are the only ones allowed to sell electricity by the kWh. Charging companies are not utility companies, so they are forced to charge by the minute, not by how much electricity is actually purchased. At the present time, Electrify America charges $0.16 per minute if a charger is rated at less than 90 kW and $0.32 per minute for chargers rated more than 90 kW.
So the claim about charging costing $0.32 a minute is accurate. But from there, the tweet veers sharply into FUD territory. As Jalopnik points out (they actually know how to do basic arithmetic), there is no way in God’s green Earth that any electric vehicle available today would charge at higher than 90 kW for 8 hours. At most it would be more like one hour. And the number of EVs you can buy today that will travel 350 miles between charging events is minuscule.
What we have here is a classic case of using one true fact as a scaffold on which to hang a pack of lies, half truths, and distortions — the very definition of fear, uncertainty, and doubt. And of course, the whole argument totally ignores that most EV charging takes place at home, something that small minded people just don’t seem able to wrap their heads around.
The Truth About Anti-EV Lies
Here’s another recent example of a complete distortion that hangs on the thinnest of threads. Someone got a utility bill for over $1,000! Quick! Off with their heads! No? Well, at least let’s run and tell the King.