Periodic Reporting for period 1 - eCharge4Drivers (Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure for improved User Experience)
Période du rapport: 2020-06-01 au 2021-11-30
The strategic objectives of eCharge4Drivers can be summarised as follows:
•Understand the user needs and collect user requirements so that the project charging solutions and services substantially improve the user charging experience and acceptance
•Design, develop and demonstrate user-friendly and cost-efficient charging stations for passenger vehicles and LEVs
•Deploy and demonstrate innovative charging solutions for on-street residential charging for passenger vehicles (mobile charging service, charging points on lamp posts) and standardised battery swapping stations for LEVs
•Design and demonstrate smart charging strategies and systems serving diverse objectives and unlocking several business opportunities
•Enable and demonstrate interoperability of end-to-end communication and provision of enhanced information to the EV users, before, during and after a charging session
•Accelerate the deployment of charging infrastructure and other charging services in a sustainable and user-centric way (decision support tools, i.e. CP location planning, new tariff schemes/incentives)
The analysis of the charging needs and concerns in each demonstration area enables the identification of the business opportunities and needs at local level which guides the eC4D technologies and services to be deployed in each pilot. In this respect, the initial list of use cases and pilot mapping planned in the GA refined to better fit the pilot’s business context. For each use case, the existing pilot systems as well as the proposed eC4D technologies/services were detailed and the partners’ roles and synergies were identified.
In addition, the key findings of the a-priori user analysis were further exploited for the definition of the design framework of the eC4D. The collected user charging needs and preferences were transformed into user requirements for ensuring the user-centric orientation of the proposed eC4D services. The market analysis of the respective market services contributed to the identification of the market gaps towards EV needs and definition of the innovative functionalities to be deployed by the eC4D service and technology providers.
The definition of the design framework for the eC4D solutions provided the necessary guidelines for the development of the respective prototypes. The beta version of the eC4D services and the prototypes of the charging technologies completed and they are ready for the lab testing. The deployment of the prototypes and services in the pilot sites is progressing in respect to the planning and it will be finalised in the 2nd reporting period.
The evaluation framework for assessing the eC4D solutions has been defined. The initial list of KPIs defined for the a-priori analysis was extended to serve the needs of the a-posteriori user analysis. The quantitative and qualitative KPIs have been defined in detail at project, pilot and use case level with the expected successful outcome. The questionnaire and interview forms have been prepared to be exploited during the demonstration activities.
Finally, an overview of the tariff schemes and incentive policies to promote e-mobility concept in urban environment has been performed via interviews (in total 36). As regards the tariff structures, a high diversity in the pricing policies adopted in the demonstration areas has been identified. A generic tariffication framework is introduced which enables the implementation of different tariff policies. A regards incentive, EV and/or EVSE purchase subsidies are the most common practices.
The field data collected from the charging technologies and services of the respective CPOs/eMSPs in the demonstration areas can be exploited by the e-mobility stakeholders to define new business models and strategies that are customised to the specificities of each city.
The bilateral agreements among technology and service providers at pilot site level created new business opportunities or strengthened the existing ones. By this way, the CPOs/eMSPs offer more competitive solutions, in terms of quality and cost, to their customers resulting in an increase of their market share.
The overview on tariff structures and incentives policies as well as the definition of the generic tariff formula provide guidelines to investors to define the appropriate tariff structure to ensure the sustainability of their investment. The lessons-learned and the best practices as regards the adaptation of the tariff parameters from the generalised formula in the pilot sites are important and necessary for the sustainable deployment of a public charging network and the promotion of the e-mobility concept in urban environment.