Skip to content

July 31, 2015

BMW pays i3 owners to charge their cars at non-peak times

by John_A

BMW Vehicles On Display At The Company's Headquarters

Electric vehicles could be our salvation from traditional gas guzzlers, but mass adoption poses new challenges. If millions of homeowners start charging their cars every night, will the power grids be able to keep up? California utility company PG&E is partnering with BMW for a trial — announced in January but starting this month — that solves the problem by compensating i3 drivers for non-peak charging. Here’s how it works: PG&E will contact BMW when they want to curb consumption. The car company will then select drivers based on their “desired departure time” submitted in the BMW i Remote app. So if you have a flat battery and need to make a trip in the next couple of hours, BMW shouldn’t throttle your home and leave you without a ride. Those that are affected will receive a notification and have the option to “opt out” of the one-hour delay, should it prove to be a bad time.

The 100 BMW i3 drivers that have opted in to the “BMW i ChargeForward” program will be rewarded in two ways: a $1,000 gift card up front and a second worth up to $540 when the scheme ends in December 2016. The latter’s value will be dependent on how many times drivers have opted out over the 18 month period. Postponed charging sounds like a pain, but it could be a useful stop-gap measure while utilities beef up their infrastructure.

[Image Credit: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg via Getty Images]

Filed under: Transportation

Comments

Via: Bloomberg

Source: BMW

Read more from News

Leave a comment

Note: HTML is allowed. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to comments