Plugging in: WNC charged up about electric vehicles

At some point, you’ve probably heard the joke, “It’s 2015: Where’s my flying car?”

Don’t expect to be cruising the troposphere, “Jetsons” style, any time soon, but transportation technology is gradually moving closer to what science fiction predicted long ago — and Asheville is part of that futuristic wave.

Imagine that a slightly older version of you has just flown into Asheville on vacation, and you’re looking to rent a car. Your fully electric vehicle is wirelessly charging in its parking space, and after a 15-mile drive, you plug your rental into the hotel’s parking deck, enjoying an evening of downtown sightseeing on foot while your vehicle charges overnight. The next morning, you check out and begin your fully electric, self-guided tour of the Blue Ridge Parkway.

Don’t worry about running out of juice, either: You’ll have plenty of opportunities to charge up between here and Virginia. In the near future, the Land of Sky Clean Vehicles Coalition “hopes to create an EV charging corridor all along the Blue Ridge Parkway, from the Smokies to Shenandoah,” coordinator Bill Eaker reports.

With the help of BrightField Transportation Solutions, a small, local company, Asheville could soon add electric vehicle tourism to its bulleted list of reasons to visit.

“We’ve still got a ways to go,” Eaker concedes, but in the meantime, chargers have already arrived at another major area attraction.

For the last four years, Land of Sky, the East Tennessee Clean Fuels Coalition and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park have been chasing grants to establish charging stations at the two most popular access points to the Smokies, “one on the Gatlinburg side and one on the Cherokee, N.C., side,” he says.

At each site, the coalition has just installed a new DC fast charger, donated by Nissan, that can deliver up to an 80 percent charge in about 30 minutes. “We had a big ribbon-cutting event about a month ago,” Eaker explains. “They were the first national park in the country to put in one of these fast chargers.”

Meanwhile, there are also about 90 Level 2 chargers, which take 4-5 hours to replenish an empty battery, in Western North Carolina. And in the last six months, four other 30-minute chargers have been installed across the region: one in Waynesville, one at A-B Tech and two in downtown Asheville, at the parking garage under the Aloft Hotel and the Public Works Building on Charlotte Street. The city, says Sustainability Analyst Kerby Smithson, offers time-based charging at those two sites so folks don’t simply park their vehicle there all day while others wait.

And at the Charlotte Street station, notes Eaker, “You’ll see a solar canopy above the chargers. That’s a BrightField Transportation project: The solar canopy is part of what they do. They generate solar power, put it into the grid and then pull it off the grid to charge these vehicles. They like to say you’re driving on sunshine.”

Filling in the gaps

“It’s a new technology, and the time has come,” declares Kent Barnes, who founded EV North Carolina. Working in their Waynesville garage, Barnes and his son, David, convert gas-powered cars to electric.

“Electric was here before gasoline, but back then, gasoline was 10 cents a gallon — and you could start [a gas-engine] easier, without having to crank it,” says Barnes. “Then World War I comes, and the Allies had gasoline as their fuel source. And that’s how decisions get made. So for 100 years, we’ve built a support mechanism for petroleum, yet everything in your house is electric.”

Fast forward about 75 years, and the Land of Sky Regional Council was looking for ways to address air quality issues in the Smokies. “We ended up establishing a regional clean air campaign to educate the public and decision-makers, like local politicians, on all of these air quality issues and possible solutions,” Eaker reports.

At first, the campaign focused on “education and outreach activities, like clean air car fairs, where we put low-emissions and fuel-efficient vehicles on display for the public to see.” Because they don’t burn fuel, electric vehicles have no tailpipe emissions. Depending on how the electricity they run on is produced, they still contribute to global warming, but typically less so than conventional vehicles.

In 2004, however, the head of the state energy office contacted Land of Sky about the U.S. Department of Energy’s Clean Cities program, which encourages cities, states and regions to get involved in the country’s shift from dependence on oil.

“They realized that, to really get these fuels and vehicles deployed and in use all over the country, they were going to need a lot of help,” Eaker explains. “So they began designating different areas of the country as Clean Cities coalitions.”

Western North Carolina, a nationally designated Clean City, has seen nearly 100 charging stations pop up in the last five years.