Advisory electric rate leaving EV drivers out of pocket on charging costs

By / 4 years ago / UK News / No Comments

The Government’s current advisory electricity rate (AER) of 4p per mile is leaving many electric vehicle drivers out of pocket on charging costs and needs to be increased to encourage EV uptake.

TMC’s fuel data analysis finds the actual cost per mile for domestic charging is as much as 65% higher than the AER for cars and up to 165% higher for vans based on the WLTP figure

Research by TMC shows the 4p per mile rate does not cover the cost of charging most electric cars – and if public charging is factored in, it does not cover the cost of charging any electric car currently available, except the Renault Twizy quadricycle.

And the cost gap is even wider for electric light commercial vehicles. Only the current Renault Kangoo Z.E., due to be replaced later this year, costs under 4p per mile to charge if home charging alone is considered.

In fact, TMC’s fuel data analysis finds the actual cost per mile for domestic charging is as much as 65% higher than the AER for cars and up to 165% higher for vans based on the WLTP figure.

It’s an issue that TMC managing director Paul Hollick, also chair of the Association of Fleet Professionals (AFP), spoke to Fleet World about earlier this month when he said reimbursement on charging costs was causing some headaches for fleet managers. Introduced from 1 September 2018 for business mileage completed in fully electric company cars and vans, the AER rate ensures no taxable profit and no Class 1 National Insurance when employers pay this rate.

Employers can choose to use a different rate, but they will only avoid a taxable Benefit-in-Kind if they can actually demonstrate a higher electricity cost per mile for business travel, and most fleets are using AER as it’s simpler and easier.

However, TMC has said that if employers want to encourage EV take-up in company fleets, they need to consider the actual cost per mile of using those cars and vans.

Paul Miers, TMC’s chief data officer, commented: “Simply paying the current AER of 4p per mile will leave company drivers out of pocket, particularly if they rely on the public charging network to be able to complete their journeys. There are also seasonal factors to consider too. In winter, the 15% real-world adjustment is likely to be an under estimation, putting even more upward pressure on the actual cost per mile.”

The TMC table shows the cost of running electric cars and vans using three different scenarios compiled by TMC’s team of data analysts and based on electricity priced at 16p/kWh for home charging and 30p/kWh for public charging.

Column 1 shows the cost per mile based on WLTP data, using home charging for all vehicle charging.

Column 2 shows the cost per mile based on the same data but with power consumption per mile raised by 15 per cent to reflect real world battery usage.

Column 3 uses the same data as column 2 but assumes a mix of 75% home charging and 25% public charging.

Scenario

1

2

3

Cycle

WLTP

Real Drive Cycle (WLTP+15%)

Real Drive Cycle (WLTP+15%)

Type of charging

100% home charging

100% home charging

75% home 25% public charging

Cars …

Renault Twizy

1.7p

2.0p

2.4p

BMW i3

3.1p

3.5p

4.3p

Hyundai Ioniq

3.2p

3.6p

4.4p

Volkswagen Up

3.2p

3.7p

4.6p

Smart Forfour

3.3p

3.8p

4.6p

Smart Fortwo

3.3p

3.8p

4.6p

Renault Zoe

3.3p

3.8p

4.7p

Hyundai Kona

3.5p

4.0p

4.9p

Tesla Model 3

3.5p

4.1p

4.9p

Kia Niro

3.6p

4.1p

5.0p

MINI Hatch

3.6p

4.2p

5.1p

Kia Soul

3.7p

4.2p

5.1p

SEAT Mii

3.7p

4.2p

5.2p

Volkswagen ID.3

3.8p

4.4p

5.4p

Vauxhall Corsa Electric

3.8p

4.4p

5.4p

DS Automobiles 3

3.9p

4.5p

5.4p

MG Motor UK MG5 EV

3.9p

4.5p

5.5p

Nissan Leaf

3.9p

4.5p

5.5p

Polestar 2

4.0p

4.6p

5.7p

Peugeot 208

4.1p

4.7p

5.8p

Tesla Model S

4.3p

4.9p

6.0p

Peugeot 2008

4.4p

5.0p

6.1p

MG Motor UK ZS

4.4p

5.0p

6.1p

Ford Mustang Mach-E

4.6p

5.2p

6.4p

Jaguar I-Pace

4.9p

5.7p

6.9p

Tesla Model X

4.9p

5.7p

6.9p

Volvo XC40

5.0p

5.8p

7.0p

Mercedes Eqc

5.2p

6.0p

7.3p

Audi E-Tron

5.4p

6.2p

7.5p

Citroen Spacetourer

5.4p

6.2p

7.6p

Peugeot Traveller

5.4p

6.2p

7.6p

Fiat E-Ducato Passenger

5.6p

6.4p

7.8p

Mercedes Eqv

6.2p

7.1p

8.7p

Porsche Taycan

6.6p

7.6p

9.3p

Vans …

Renault Kangoo ZE

3.1p

3.6p

8.0p

Renault Master Cab ZE

4.3p

4.9p

7.8p

Renault Master ZE

4.3p

4.9p

7.8p

Nissan e-NV200

5.2p

5.9p

7.8p

Nissan e-NV200 Combi

5.2p

5.9p

7.8p

Nissan e-NV200 Evalia

5.2p

5.9p

9.0p

Fiat E-Ducato Chassis Cab

5.6p

6.4p

10.3p

Fiat E-Ducato Chassis Cab ovr 3.5t

5.6p

6.4p

14.9p

Fiat E-Ducato

5.6p

6.4p

10.0p

Fiat E-Ducato over 3.5t

5.6p

6.4p

7.2p

Peugeot Expert

5.6p

6.4p

7.2p

Citroen Dispatch

5.7p

6.6p

7.2p

Vauxhall Vivaro

5.9p

6.7p

7.8p

Levc VN5

6.4p

7.4p

4.4p

Mercedes eVITO

7.1p

8.2p

6.0p

Maxus eDELIVER 3

7.3p

8.4p

6.0p

Volkswagen Abt eTRANSPORTER

7.4p

8.5p

8.2p

Mercedes eSPRINTER Medium

10.6p

12.2p

10.3p

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Natalie Middleton

Natalie has worked as a fleet journalist for over 20 years, previously as assistant editor on the former Company Car magazine before joining Fleet World in 2006. Prior to this, she worked on a range of B2B titles, including Insurance Age and Insurance Day. Natalie edits all the Fleet World websites and newsletters, and loves to hear about any latest industry news - or gossip.