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48 Colum. J. Env't L. 1 (2022-2023)

handle is hein.journals/cjel48 and id is 1 raw text is: 










  Rate Base the Charge Space: The Law of

     Utility EV Infrastructure Investment

                           Adam  D. Orford*

  To  fight climate  change  and  support  the  transition to a zero-
emissions transportation sector, the United States is setting out to build
a huge fleet of electric vehicle (EV) charging stations. But EV charging
infrastructure-often    called  EV   supply   equipment    (EVSE)-is
expensive, and how   to pay for it is not straightforward. This Article
explores the emerging   law and  policy of using the bill payments  of
millions of electric utility customers to solve the problem. State utility
regulators, in obscure  technical proceedings,  have begun   directing
billions of ratepayer dollars toward EVSE. Is this an unfair and risky
social spending experiment, as its opponents argue?  Or is it a sensible
economic   investment  that will save ratepayers  money,  even  while
responding   strategically to shifting market  conditions, supporting
domestic  manufacturing,  and  achieving  environmental  goals, as its
proponents  contend?  State regulators, one by one, have been reaching
the same  conclusion: The environmental,  energy, and economic policy
considerations are aligned, and the ratepayer funding approach makes
sense, provided  appropriate ratepayer  protections are in place.  To
shine a light on these developments, this Article presents the findings of
a  fifty-state (plus D.C.  and  Puerto  Rico)  review  of  regulatory
proceedings, revealing the full extent of authorized utility spending, the
wide variety of EVSE investment program  elements, the broad range of
reasoning  that regulators have found persuasive, and  the protections
that regulators  have put in place  to ensure ratepayer  benefit. The
Article demonstrates that support for utility EV infrastructure spending
is not the sole province of states with progressive climate politics; that
new   federal funding   is augmenting,   but  not  displacing,  utility
investment; and  that public utilities commissions have concluded that

Assistant Professor, University of Georgia School of Law. J.D., M.P.P., Ph.D. Many thanks to
Sydney Brogden, Cole Harper, and Anna Scartz, who provided invaluable research assistance
on this project; to the participants of the online environmental law scholarship workshop-
particularly Michael Pappas, Heather Payne, and Sonya Ziaja-for their insightful comments on
the project; and to former California Public Utilities Commissioner Carla J. Peterman and
former CPUC Energy Division analyst Noel Crisostomo for their leadership on these policies,
and the opportunity to work with and learn from them.


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