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High costs for property owners to retrofit for electric cars

Additional costs of retrofitting a building could be up to five times the cost of deploying car chargers during initial construction, consulting firm McKinsey estimates.

As well as being expensive, retrofitting can be technically challenging often requiring boring or trench work.

NSW’s Electric Vehicle Strategy suggests, depending on the type of building, it could cost about $75,000 for an apartment with 20 car spaces to be retrofitted.

While acknowledging the importance the property industry plays in providing EV infrastructure, the Property Council of Australia’s NSW executive director Luke Achterstraat said every additional housing cost undercut affordability.

“The opportunity in front of us is to find ways to make buildings ‘EV ready,’ [that] doesn’t impose the cost of EV infrastructure on those who can least afford it, and currently don’t have use for it,” he said.

Housing affordability is in “dire straits” and layering of costs was a major contributor, he said.

The opportunity in front of us is to find ways to make buildings ‘EV ready,’ [that] doesn’t impose the cost of EV infrastructure on those who can least afford it.

Property Council of Australia’s NSW executive director Luke Achterstraat

Ross De Rango, the Electric Vehicle Council’s head of energy and infrastructure, said the 25 per cent recommendation was “not sufficiently ambitious” and would create an “economic problem” for apartment owners down the track.

“Electrical retrofitting has to be agreed by the majority of the owners’ corporation. Failing to build it in during construction will impact their [owners’] amenity in the long term,” he said.

The new 25 per cent charging standard will not apply to ‘class 1 buildings,’ residential houses which make up the majority of existing residences, leaving a vast swathe of dwellings without EV charging.

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Residential houses will make up 75 per cent of the floor area to be constructed over the next three decades, Ms Delafoulhouze said.

Other jurisdictions are sharpening rules around charging stations in buildings.

California’s Green Building Code requires all residential parking in one or two family dwellings and townhouses to be EV-capable. Multi-family dwellings or apartments must provide charging capacity for 10 per cent of parking, while the remaining 90 per cent must be EV-capable.

France has similar strict requirements with 20 per cent of non-residential parking spots needing EV chargers and 100 per cent of residential parking spots in new buildings needing to be equipped with charging stations.

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