Xcel Energy has a new $44.5 million plan to boost electric vehicle adoption in Minnesota that includes rebates for home-wiring upgrades but a much smaller foray into charging infrastructure than its original plan.
Xcel withdrew a $330 million proposal in June after the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (PUC) approved a smaller rate increase than it wanted and the utility received criticism from gas station owners, Gov. Tim Walz's administration, and Attorney General Keith Ellison's office.
Top company officials said Xcel regrouped to find greater consensus on how it can support the construction of more public EV charging infrastructure after the criticism of its original idea to build and operate 730 high-speed charging stations.
That build-out program — novel and controversial — would have cost $192 million alone before it was nixed.
Anjali Bains, lead director of energy access and equity for the nonprofit Fresh Energy, said the new proposal is more of a "continuation or expansion" in areas that have already been "thoroughly discussed."
Nadia El Mallakh, Xcel's vice president of clean transportation, said Xcel is analyzing "gaps in the market" for public fast charging and explored the merits of offering rebates to build the infrastructure or partnering with private companies like gas stations.
Plus, she said the industry is in flux as many automakers adopt Tesla's charging technology rather than use a charging port design considered standard in a federal EV infrastructure program.
"When we saw this happening, it really created more uncertainty in the market," El Mallakh said.