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Report from RMI: After the Pandemic, Use EVs to Absorb Spare Utility Capacity

April 15, 2020

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Report from RMI: After the Pandemic, Use EVs to Absorb Spare Utility Capacity

April 15, 2020

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Before the coronavirus pandemic hit, demand for electricity had already been flat or declining on most utility grids in the United States for a decade. But with 297 million people—90 percent of the US population—now under “shelter in place” or “stay at home” orders, the load on utility systems is declining even more. And that creates a significant challenge for the US utility sector, whose business model is essentially based on growth. Fortunately, the need to decarbonize our economy presents new opportunities to increase electricity demand beneficially. And doing that—particularly by electrifying transportation—has never been cheaper or easier to do than it is now. Link

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Observations
No items found.

Report from RMI: After the Pandemic, Use EVs to Absorb Spare Utility Capacity

April 15, 2020

Get our newsletter

Clean energy news and insight delivered to your inbox.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Before the coronavirus pandemic hit, demand for electricity had already been flat or declining on most utility grids in the United States for a decade. But with 297 million people—90 percent of the US population—now under “shelter in place” or “stay at home” orders, the load on utility systems is declining even more. And that creates a significant challenge for the US utility sector, whose business model is essentially based on growth. Fortunately, the need to decarbonize our economy presents new opportunities to increase electricity demand beneficially. And doing that—particularly by electrifying transportation—has never been cheaper or easier to do than it is now. Link

Share post:

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Clean energy news and insight delivered to your inbox.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Ready to get started on your energy project?

Contact our team

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From Risk to Resilience: Energy as a Competitive Edge

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Breaking 83%: We Must Think Differently

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No items found.

Report from RMI: After the Pandemic, Use EVs to Absorb Spare Utility Capacity

April 15, 2020

Download resource

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Observations
No items found.

Report from RMI: After the Pandemic, Use EVs to Absorb Spare Utility Capacity

April 15, 2020

Before the coronavirus pandemic hit, demand for electricity had already been flat or declining on most utility grids in the United States for a decade. But with 297 million people—90 percent of the US population—now under “shelter in place” or “stay at home” orders, the load on utility systems is declining even more. And that creates a significant challenge for the US utility sector, whose business model is essentially based on growth. Fortunately, the need to decarbonize our economy presents new opportunities to increase electricity demand beneficially. And doing that—particularly by electrifying transportation—has never been cheaper or easier to do than it is now. Link

Observations
No items found.

Report from RMI: After the Pandemic, Use EVs to Absorb Spare Utility Capacity

April 15, 2020

Before the coronavirus pandemic hit, demand for electricity had already been flat or declining on most utility grids in the United States for a decade. But with 297 million people—90 percent of the US population—now under “shelter in place” or “stay at home” orders, the load on utility systems is declining even more. And that creates a significant challenge for the US utility sector, whose business model is essentially based on growth. Fortunately, the need to decarbonize our economy presents new opportunities to increase electricity demand beneficially. And doing that—particularly by electrifying transportation—has never been cheaper or easier to do than it is now. Link

Observations
No items found.

Report from RMI: After the Pandemic, Use EVs to Absorb Spare Utility Capacity

April 15, 2020

Before the coronavirus pandemic hit, demand for electricity had already been flat or declining on most utility grids in the United States for a decade. But with 297 million people—90 percent of the US population—now under “shelter in place” or “stay at home” orders, the load on utility systems is declining even more. And that creates a significant challenge for the US utility sector, whose business model is essentially based on growth. Fortunately, the need to decarbonize our economy presents new opportunities to increase electricity demand beneficially. And doing that—particularly by electrifying transportation—has never been cheaper or easier to do than it is now. Link

Related

See All

Observations

From Risk to Resilience: Energy as a Competitive Edge

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From Risk to Resilience: Energy as a Competitive Edge

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Economic Energy Solutions for Sustainable Extraction

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Economic Energy Solutions for Sustainable Extraction

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Breaking 83%: We Must Think Differently

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Breaking 83%: We Must Think Differently

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Locations
New York
110 Greene Street, Suite 301
New York
,
NY
10012
Southeast
190 19th Street N., Suite 2009
Birmingham
,
AL
35210
D.C. / Northern VA
8484 Westpark Dr., Suite 720
McLean
,
VA
22102
Richmond
1419 W Main Street
Richmond
,
VA
23220
Greater Philadelphia Office
215 Executive Drive
Moorestown
,
NJ
08057
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