Two state agencies support Xcel Energy's decision to suddenly withdraw a $330 million electric vehicle initiative after utility regulators shot down the company's rate hike requests.
Xcel hasn't done a good enough job with existing electric vehicle pilots to merit a big new program, say the Minnesota Department of Commerce and the Attorney General's Office.
"Xcel has not shown itself to be capable of leading the electric vehicle transition," the Attorney General's Office said in a recent filing with the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (PUC).
In another recent filing, the Commerce Department said that "recent developments ... call into question [Xcel's] aptitude at operating in the EV space."
Both state departments represent ratepayers before the PUC. And both say Xcel is behind schedule on an already approved EV fast-charger initiative, and that it botched the rollout of commercial charging pilot programs in Minnesota.
Xcel acknowledges "operational challenges" in its commercial charging programs, but it defended its record in a statement to the Star Tribune.
"Xcel Energy is well suited to lead the transition to EVs. The company has decades of building and operating critical energy infrastructure effectively and reliably." Xcel noted that its flagship home EV charging program has met with overwhelming customer satisfaction.
Last summer, Minneapolis-based Xcel proposed a $330 million "Clean Transportation Portfolio," anchored by a $192 million plan to build and own 730 EV fast chargers in Minnesota.