NREL Helps Communities Assess Their Readiness for Electric Vehicles
The PEV Scorecard gives local leaders tips for improvement
Thursday, February 14, 2013
The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) has launched a new tool to help local and regional leaders assess the readiness of their communities for the arrival of plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs).
The Plug-In Electric Vehicle Community Readiness Scorecard (PEV Scorecard), developed by NREL for DOE's Clean Cities initiative, is a detailed, interactive online assessment tool that collects information about a community's PEV readiness, provides feedback on its progress, and offers guidance for improvement. Municipalities, counties and states can use the PEV Scorecard to ensure they're prepared to facilitate the electrification of transportation and reap the environmental, economic and energy security benefits that come with it.
"The nationwide deployment of electric vehicles is a revolution in transportation," said NREL engineer Mike Simpson, who led the tool's development. "There's a significant amount of thought and effort involved in shepherding these new technologies into our communities, and the Energy Department saw a real need to provide local and regional leaders with some interactive blueprints."
PEV readiness is a community-wide effort 
that requires charging infrastructure, planning, regulations and support 
services. And it demands coordination and collaboration among dozens of 
stakeholders, including utilities, charging equipment manufacturers, vehicle 
dealerships, metropolitan planning departments, electrical contractors and 
community organizations. The PEV Scorecard helps communities make sense of the 
necessary steps and track their progress along the way.
Available online at DOE's Alternative Fuels 
Data Center (www.afdc.energy.gov/pev-readiness), the PEV Scorecard walks 
users through a variety of PEV readiness topics, including permitting and 
inspection processes for charging equipment installations, incentives and 
promotions, education and outreach, coordination with utilities, likely PEV 
adoption rates, and long-range infrastructure planning.
Within each topic, community 
representatives answer a series of multiple-choice questions related to their 
level of preparation. Communities receive scores for each topic, ranging from 
"Needs Improvement" to "Excellent." The tool then provides customized 
recommendations, resources, and case studies to help communities raise their 
scores within each topic. A community's scores and recommendations are private 
and cannot be viewed by other users of the tool.
Once a community begins its assessment, multiple representatives can return as often as needed to make updates and track progress. DOE encourages each community to designate a central point of contact who collaborates with local and regional stakeholders to coordinate their input when using the tool.
"The Energy Department is excited to 
provide this tool to help make it easier for communities across the country to 
access more transportation energy options," Clean Cities Co-Director Linda 
Bluestein said. "Not only will it allow them to identify new opportunities for 
deployment, but it will also provide them with access to a large collection of 
expert tools and resources."
Clean Cities is the deployment arm of the 
U.S. Department of Energy's Vehicle Technologies Office. Through the work of 
nearly 100 local coalitions, Clean Cities works to reduce petroleum use in 
transportation.
The National Renewable Energy Laboratory is 
the Energy Department's primary national laboratory for renewable energy and 
energy efficiency research and development. NREL is operated for DOE by The 
Alliance for Sustainable Energy LLC.
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