Proposed plan would provide $100 million per
year in incentives, education and infrastructure support to remove
barriers to electrification and deliver significant environmental
and air quality improvements for communities
ComEd announced that it has submitted its plan to support the
adoption of beneficial electrification (BE) technologies, including
customer adoption of electric vehicles (EVs) to the Illinois
Commerce Commission (ICC), which regulates the state’s public
utilities. ComEd is proposing to commit $100 million annually over
the next three years to promote beneficial electrification, with
programs designed to reduce upfront costs of EVs and charging
equipment; enable broad, equitable deployment of charging
infrastructure and other electrification technologies; educate
customers; and prioritize investments equitably for communities in
need.
This plan would significantly lower carbon emissions and provide
invaluable health and human welfare benefits including air quality
improvements derived from a reduction of harmful pollutants from
vehicle tailpipes. The plan marks the latest milestone in the
implementation of the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA).
ComEd’s plan advances the objectives of CEJA, including the law’s
goal of having 1 million EVs on the road in Illinois by 2030 and
reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving air quality for
communities across the state.
Through a mix of incentives, new rate design options, and
educational and technical support, ComEd’s plan would help promote
the transition to clean transportation and other clean
technologies. The proposed investments would prioritize low-income
customers and customers residing in environmental justice and
Restore, Reinvest, Renew (R3) communities, as defined by the State
of Illinois.
“ComEd is committed to supporting a clean energy future that
promotes cleaner air and safer communities, and that helps all of
our communities achieve the goals set forward by the state’s new
clean energy law,” said Gil C. Quiniones, CEO of ComEd. “The
threat of climate change requires us to take swift action to reduce
emissions by moving faster to adopt cleaner technologies. Designed
with input from a wide range of local stakeholders and experts, our
plan will reduce barriers for customers and support broad adoption
of electrification across homes, schools, and communities in our
region – keeping the state at the forefront for clean energy while
creating the infrastructure needed to eliminate harmful emissions
across all our communities.”
ComEd made the announcement during a ribbon-cutting ceremony at
a recently installed Multi-Unit Dwelling (MUD) EV charging station
at 43rd Street and Calumet Avenue in Chicago’s Bronzeville
neighborhood. This installation is the first of five planned MUD
charging stations that will serve residential properties with three
or more units and enable research funded in part by a U.S.
Department of Energy grant. EV charging infrastructure, and
especially infrastructure designed to provide accessibility to all
communities, is vital for the broad adoption of EVs. The new BE
Plan, combined with state and federal programs, will further expand
deployment of EV infrastructure across northern Illinois.
“For too long, the health of our communities has been negatively
impacted by harmful air pollution, but CEJA is giving us an
opportunity to reverse that trend and accelerate the transition to
EVs,” said Billy Davis, General Manager of Jitney EV and a
member of the Bronzeville Community of the Future Advisory
Council. “The Beneficial Electrification plan ComEd is
proposing will give a much-needed boost to our efforts in
Bronzeville and across the region to electrify transportation,
eliminate charging deserts, improve air quality, and create
economic opportunities for new businesses.”
In support of the state’s goals, the plan will contribute to
long-term air quality improvements by enabling EV adoption to lower
carbon and air pollutant emissions. ComEd estimates that vehicle
and other incentives and rebates as outlined in the plan would help
remove 900,000 metric tons of carbon emissions, the equivalent of
the amount of carbon sequestered by approximately 1 million acres
of U.S. forests in one year, an area approximately the size of
Glacier National Park. What’s more, the plan would avoid an
estimated 4,000 metric tons of local pollutants emitted from
vehicle tailpipes, providing health and human welfare benefits,
especially for disadvantaged communities where vehicle emissions
have the greatest health impacts.
“CACC encourages the use of clean fuel vehicles, clean fuels,
and advanced vehicle technologies to promote an improved
environment, energy efficiencies, domestic and renewable fuels, and
a reduction in the use of imported petroleum,” said John Walton,
Chair of the Chicago Area Clean Cities (CACC) coalition.
“Electric vehicles have a role in furthering our mission to improve
air quality and reduce lung disease, and ComEd’s beneficial
electrification plan will help expand access to infrastructure and
encourage more robust EV participation for our region.”
“While Illinois has dramatically cut air pollution from fossil
fuel power plants, vehicles are now the number one cause of carbon
pollution in Illinois” said Brian Urbaszewski, Director of
Environmental Health Programs at Respiratory Health
Association. “With a focus on getting more zero-emission
electric vehicles in communities, ComEd’s Beneficial
Electrification plan is a serious roadmap for improving air quality
precisely where the combination of high lung disease rates and
unhealthy air pollution levels present the greatest threat to area
residents.”
Earlier this year, ComEd participated in a series of workshops
to engage regional partners, including 10 meetings hosted by the
ICC, to formalize input from those representing communities, health
advocacy, industry, local business, school districts and other
customer groups and interests across the service region. ComEd
embraced the feedback it heard and proposed a plan to address the
priorities of the communities it serves.
The key components of the BE Plan include:
Residential Program
The BE Plan includes $15 million annually in incentives that
will reduce upfront costs related to purchase and installation of
EVs, in-home charging stations, and non-transportation
electrification equipment (such as building heating and cooling,
lawn equipment, electric stoves, etc.). Larger rebates will be
available for low-income customers and those located in
environmental justice and/or equity investment eligible
communities. To ensure those with the greatest needs have access to
resources, ComEd will target 50 percent of its residential program
funds for customers in equity investment eligible communities.
C&I and Public Sector Program
To reduce the cost barriers associated with purchasing fleet
vehicles and installing charging stations, the plan proposes $63
million annually to support new rebates for fleet electrification,
with the majority of funding going toward vehicle rebates for
public transit, commercial and school fleets. Funding will also
support charging installation costs for public sector customers and
public charging providers in environmental justice or R3
communities. This is intended to provide additional support to
accelerate the benefits of clean transportation to environmental
justice and equity investment eligible communities. Across the
C&I and Public Sector Program, ComEd will target more than 40
percent of funding for customers within or primarily serving equity
investment eligible communities.
“ComEd’s Beneficial Electrification Plan proposes strategies to
accelerate electrification of transportation and buildings that are
consistent with our Climate Action Plan for the Chicago Region,”
said City of Geneva Mayor Kevin Burns, Chairman of the
Metropolitan Mayors Caucus’ Environment Committee, Energy
Subcommittee, and EV Readiness Advisory Committee. “The plan
offers resources to help local governments, businesses and
residents alike adopt new technologies that will reduce carbon
emissions, reduce air pollution, and promote economic growth,
particularly in communities that have faced barriers to
electrification.”
“Innovative manufacturers not only use emerging new technology
like electric vehicles and charging infrastructure, we create it
and produce it,” said Mark Denzler, President & CEO
of the Illinois Manufacturer’s Association. “Since 1990,
manufacturing has reduced emissions more than any other sector in
the United States. The manufacturing sector is developing new
technologies that make energy more affordable, reliable, and
cleaner every year. This new program will incent our state’s
leading economic engine to further invest in electric-powered
transportation and support Illinois jobs.”
New C&I EV Charging Class
In addition to incentives, ComEd is proposing a dedicated EV
charging delivery customer class for (commercial and industrial
(C&I) customers. The new rate class would significantly reduce
upfront infrastructure or “make-ready” costs and would provide
members an alternative to the default demand-based rate structures,
which, at low utilization rates, can make the cost of charging high
for customers. These efforts reflect recommendations from
stakeholders and are intended to reduce barriers to the deployment
of charging infrastructure in ComEd’s service territory. ComEd
expects the benefits of this new customer class to multiply the
impact of federal funding that the Illinois Department of
Transportation will employ to support the development of charging
stations across the highway system.
“We are pleased to partner with ComEd to help advance the move
toward electrification and drive the expansion of green jobs in the
region,” said Brian Robb, Government Relations Director at Lion
Electric. “In the last several years, Lion has been working
with the elected officials, advocacy groups, environmental justice
groups and many organizations such as ComEd to demonstrate how
electrification can deliver economic growth, benefit a community’s
health and well-being, and help build a solid charging
infrastructure network in the State of Illinois.”
“Staying at the forefront of the emergence of electric-powered
transportation options is important to the customers retailers
serve and, therefore, important to us,” said Rob Karr,
President, Illinois Retail Merchants Association. “This
proposal by ComEd includes a provision that will make it more
convenient and cost affordable for Illinois retailers to install
beneficial electrification infrastructure such as charging
stations.”
Customer Education and Pilot Programs
A $9 million community education program will empower customers
to make the transition to electrification. This program will help
residential and business customers understand the timeline and
impact of electrifying personal vehicles and fleets, as well as how
utility programs and rates can benefit them. ComEd is also
proposing $5 million annually for pilots to study the benefits of
various electrification strategies for customers and the grid.
Non-Transportation Opportunities
In addition to EV benefits, the BE Plan offers a broad
opportunity to reduce carbon and other emissions across sectors.
While most of the BE Plan focuses on clean transportation, ComEd is
also proposing a set of non-transportation rebates to work in
tandem with energy efficiency offerings to spur adoption of
electric technologies in the residential, commercial and industrial
sectors.
Rate Impact
ComEd is proposing a cost recovery plan that aligns benefits
with costs, avoids large rate impacts, and that minimizes impact on
low-income customers. Pending approval, the average residential
bill won’t see an increase until 2025, with an average impact of 11
cents a month, and up to 21 cents a month by 2027. For C&I
bills, customers would see a slow increase of 42 cents per Megawatt
hour (MWh) in 2025, and up to 83 cents per MWh in 2027, year three
of the program.
“I appreciate ComEd’s Beneficial Electrification plan,” said
Rockford Mayor Tom McNamara. “It puts $300M over three years
towards educating consumers on the benefit of electric vehicles,
making EV charging stations in residential homes more easily
attainable regardless of income through incentives and rebates, and
should spur the use of a cleaner energy for commercial
companies.
"The IEC Powered by Future Green is particularly excited with
ComEd'S inclusion of a School Bus Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) Pilot and a
new rate class for electric school bus chargers that will alleviate
the upfront cost burden of infrastructure upgrades,” said Tim
Farquer, Administrative Lead for the Bus-2-Grid Initiative, a
service of IEC Powered by Future Green, and Superintendent of
Williamsfield Schools. “Add in ComEd's proposed electric school
bus/charger rebates, and the upfront cost hurdle of school bus
electrification will become much easier to clear. We welcome the
opportunity to explore a partnership with ComEd to implement these
new programs alongside new solar installs that benefit our most
vulnerable students & schools. These programs bring us one step
closer to the day our kids no longer recognize the smell of harmful
diesel emissions."
Commonwealth Edison Company (ComEd) is a unit
of Chicago-based Exelon Corporation (NASDAQ: EXC), the nation’s
leading competitive energy provider, with approximately 10 million
customers. ComEd provides service to approximately 4 million
customers across northern Illinois, or 70 percent of the state’s
population. For more information visit ComEd.com, and connect with
the company on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.
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