By Cahpcc (Own work) [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons
Portland General Electric charging station at Electric Avenue

Portland General Electric: Leading the Charge on Electric Transportation

March 8, 2018
Project includes charging station expansion; partnership with TriMet; and customer support to transition to EVs

Portland General Electric announced plans to advance Oregon’s transition to a clean energy future with new investments in electric transportation for car owners and mass transit riders.

The project also increases customer engagement, with funding for a three-year outreach and technical assistance to support customers interested in transitioning to electric vehicles: Outreach will include technical assistance to builders, commercial and industrial customers, and hosting ride-and-drive events to expose more Oregonians to the opportunities to adopt an electrified mode of travel.

PGE’s plan, which has been approved by the Oregon Public Utility Commission.  is part of the company’s commitment to expand access to clean energy options for its customers and advance the state’s goals toward a decarbonized energy system.

“An electrified transportation system is critical to a carbon-free economy, and the approval of our plan is a big step in that direction,” said Bill Nicholson, PGE senior vice president, customer service, transmission and distribution. “This plan is going to significantly increase accessibility, affordability and reliability of a charging infrastructure – further enabling our customers to choose electricity as their transportation fuel.”

Bill Nicholson, PGE senior vice president, customer service, transmission and distribution said: “This plan is going to significantly increase accessibility, affordability and reliability of a charging infrastructure – further enabling our customers to choose electricity as their transportation fuel.”

Partnership with TriMet

To enable Oregon’s first all-electric bus route: PGE will install and manage six bus charging stations, creating an infrastructure to support an entirely electric bus route in Beaverton. The partnership also enables TriMet to purchase an additional electric bus.

The charging stations will be strategically located across PGE’s service area so, like a gas station, drivers have reliable access to efficient charging options.

 “Our innovative partnership with PGE allows us to not only test clean-running electric buses, but thanks to their support, we are able to expand this test fleet from four to five buses,” said TriMet’s Interim General Manager Shelley Devine. “TriMet and PGE are helping to lay the groundwork for a future greener fleet in the greater Portland area.”

Approval of PGE’s plan follows Gov. Kate Brown’s executive order issued in November 2017 establishing a goal of 50,000 registered electric vehicles in Oregon by 2020.

“I’m pleased to see this plan was approved,” said Jeff Allen, executive director, Forth. “As more utility investment deploys more charging infrastructure, more drivers adopt electric vehicles. More vehicles on the road also create greater utilization of charging infrastructure, which in turn improves the economics of infrastructure deployment.”

PGE will provide regular updates on each project and additional information about its commitment to leading Oregon toward an electric transportation future on our website at PortlandGeneral.com/PlugIn.

PGE’s website link to this is at this link, and more information from the original announcement is available at this link.

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