An exhaustive list of compliance requirements for Public Charging Station (PCS) have also been outlined by the ministry
The Ministry of Power revised its electric vehicle charging guidelines to de-license the setting up of EV charging infrastructure
The revised norms include allowing owners to charge EVs at their residences/offices using their existing electricity connections.
“The objective is to enable a faster adoption of electric vehicles in India by ensuring safe, reliable, accessible and affordable charging infrastructure and ecosystem,” the Ministry said in an official statement.
Any individual/entity is free to set up public charging stations without the requirement of a licence provided that, such stations meet the technical, safety as well as performance standards and protocols.
An exhaustive list of compliance requirements for Public Charging Station (PCS) have also been outlined by the ministry.
The guidelines have been made further technology agnostic by providing for not only the prevailing international charging standards available in the market but also the new Indian charging standards.
In order to address the challenge of making a charging station financially viable in the period of growth of EVs, a revenue sharing model has been put in place for land used for the same.
Land available with the government/public entities shall be provided for installation of PCS to a government/public entity on a revenue sharing basis for installation of PCS at a fixed rate of Re 1/kWh (used for charging) to be paid to the land-owning agency from such PCS business payable on quarterly basis.
A model revenue sharing agreement has also been included under the guidelines. Such revenue sharing agreement may be initially entered by parties for a period of 10 years.
Timelines have been prescribed as per the Electricity (Rights of Consumers).
Accordingly, PCS shall be provided connection within seven days in metro cities, fifteen days in other municipal areas and thirty days in rural areas.
Within these timelines the distribution licensees shall provide new connection or modify an existing connection.
Tariff for supply of electricity to EV Public Charging Stations: The tariff for supply of electricity to Public EV Charging Stations shall be a single part tariff and shall not exceed the “Average Cost of Supply” till March 31, 2025. The same tariff shall be applicable for BCS.
The tariff applicable for domestic consumption shall be applicable for domestic charging.
The revised norms provide that as electricity is being provided at concessional rates and also considering the fact that subsidy is being provided by the central/state governments in many cases for setting up public charging stations, the state government shall fix the ceiling of service charges to be charged by such charging stations.
The new norms also provide that any public charging station/chain of charging stations may obtain electricity from any generation company through open access. Open access shall be provided for this purpose within 15 days of receipt of the application complete in all respect.
They will be required to pay the applicable surcharge – equal to the current level of cross subsidy (not more than 20 percent, as per the Tariff Policy Guidelines), transmission charges and wheeling charges.
Public charging station will be required to tie up with at least one online Network Service Providers (NSPs) to enable advance remote/online booking of charging slots by EV owners.
The complete guidelines can be accessed on the website of Ministry of Power.