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More EV chargers incoming in Detroit Charge Ahead initiative

More EV chargers incoming in Detroit Charge Ahead initiative

Axios26-03-2025

As Detroit continues to go all-in on electric vehicle charging infrastructure, a City Council member cautioned the city to explain to residents why these chargers won't be left collecting cobwebs.
The big picture: The city is looking to install public high-speed chargers on businesses' properties under its Detroit Charge Ahead initiative.
City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved two easement agreements for EV charging at Triangle Hardware on Gratiot Avenue.
State of play: City Council president pro tem James Tate supported EV charging but raised questions in a committee meeting earlier this month on whether data supported the demand for stations, and how the city could assure the chargers wouldn't become an underused resource.
Tim Slusser, Detroit's chief of mobility innovation, said charger locations were identified via traffic pattern data.
Slusser said the city needs to build infrastructure to match the amount of usage it wants to see in the future.
Between the lines: "Based on conversations with the departments, (Tate) felt comfortable moving the resolutions forward for approval," per a statement from his office Tuesday after the vote.
Tate's concerns about utilization remain, but he got clarity that the city is working to ensure infrastructure is used and will collect more data, per the statement.
By the numbers: Slusser said in 2023 he wants Detroit to "be the leader in the Midwest for charging infrastructure." The city has 60 charging sites, according to its website, and is trying to build more high-speed chargers.

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