
2 minute read
Colorado o ers millions to help fleets plug in

Grants will support fast charging stations
BY MICHAEL BOOTH THE COLORADO SUN
Colorado regulators have wielded plenty of sticks in recent years while mandating the changeover of fossil fuel use in the state to clean-generated electricity. Clean cars, clean trucks, clean stoves and furnaces, clean power stations — the rules are stacking up in bundles.
But state o cials say they have plenty of carrots in stock, too. And they’re adding another, calling it Fleet ZERO, and dangling $7 million in the rst year with millions more to come.
Fleet ZERO o ers grants for building fast charging stations to local governments or private businesses that run large groups of light-, medium- or heavy-duty electric vehicles. e government has done its job requiring manufacturers to produce increasing percentages of clean electric vehicles of all sizes, state regulators say, and now Colorado must ease the change with grants for charging and other support systems. e transportation sector is the leading contributor of greenhouse gas emissions and the building blocks of local ozone pollution, said Matt Lerman, infrastructure program manager at the Colorado Energy O ce, which is funneling many federal and state grants for electri cation. Moreover, truck and service eets are often located in or spend their day driving through disproportionately impacted communities, so the eet changeover is a key to environmental justice mandates, Lerman said. e $7 million rst-year fund is part of $310 million in electri cation funding available through the Colorado Energy O ce and other state agencies in coming years. e budget is also committed to tax credits for new and used electric vehicle purchases, e-bike support programs, home electri cation by replacing gas appliances with induction ranges and heat pumps, and more. e Air Quality Control Commission recently passed rules requiring manufacturers of medium- and heavy-duty work vehicles to produce a gradually increasing percentage of clean-fuel engines beginning with the 2027 model year. e Fleet ZERO (short for ZeroEmission Resource Opportunity) grants can cover up to 80% of the cost of projects, ranging from install- ing eet charging stations to upgrading local electrical transformers and other transmission equipment. Disadvantaged businesses or neighborhoods can see up to 90% grant nancing for their projects. e state grants can be combined with utility and local grants for electric infrastructure, Lerman said. e current round of grant applications is open through June 30. e Colorado Sun co-owns Colorado Community Media as a partner in the Colorado News Conservancy. It is a reader-supported news organization dedicated to covering the people, places and policies that matter in Colorado. Read more, sign up for free newsletters and subscribe at coloradosun.com.
“Infrastructure is a foundation for that change,” he said.
Helping eets transition to clean fuel faster will “protect the environment and signi cantly improve air quality in some of Colorado’s most polluted communities,” said Will Toor, executive director of the energy o ce.
Medium- and heavy-duty trucks are only 10% of vehicles on Colorado’s roads, but contribute 22% of transportation greenhouse gases, 30% of the nitrogen oxides that build into ozone, and 40% of particulate matter, another EPA-controlled pollutant. Colorado still generates a signi cant portion of its electricity through coal, but that percentage is declining fast and coal will be gone from the system by 2031.
Colorado has a goal of nearly 1 million electric light-duty cars, SUVs and pickups on state roads by 2030.
Initial projects will focus on eets and businesses with vehicles traveling up to 150 miles a day and returning to a “base” for nine to 10 hours of overnight charging between shifts. Later grants will help expand public charging access for working vehicles that use interstates or other heavily traveled corridors, Lerman said.
Grant recipients agree to share charging data on a network, which allows the state to see which funding ideas are the most e cient and how charging patterns develop as more electric vehicles join eets.
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