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EV being charged at home charging station.

The transport sector is set to become the highest source of emissions in NSW and Australia by the end of the decade. Meanwhile, buildings account for 40% of emissions. Renewable energy and the use of electric vehicles (EVs) offer potential to tackle both these major emission sources. 

Governments have started devising strategies to promote and adjust to prepare for this seismic shift from liquid fuels to electricity for road transport. This shift brings new challenges of increasing electricity demand while ensuring this demand matches the rapid growth in supply from variable renewable energy sources.

Bidirectional EV charging or Vehicle-to-Everything (V2X) can help address this challenge, provided technologies, systems and appropriate incentives are in place. The potential usable storage in the EV fleet in Australia is nearly four times larger than the total storage in the National Electricity Market (NEM) currently (according to recent research published by enX on behalf of ARENA). Even the equivalent of today’s relatively small EV fleet is around 13.5 GWh or 70-times the capacity of Tesla’s Hornsdale Power Reserve.

V2X can enable greater penetration of renewables in the grid, supporting the move to net zero in NSW and nationally. It can achieve this through EV charging in the middle of the day when cheap solar is abundant, and discharging at other times as needed. Both private passenger vehicles and the electricity grid are underutilised assets. Integrating them will improve their utilisation and support a move to net zero emissions through decarbonisation of the grid, households and transport.

However, V2X is still nascent around the world and there is little real-world experience with the new CCS2 charging standard that is set to replacing CHAdeMO as the dominant V2X standard. More needs to be done to understand how the technology works, what the technical integration challenges are, what consumer attitudes are and how we influence their behaviours, and what policy and regulatory levers need to be pulled to facilitate the transition.

This project will fill an important gap in the Australian energy transition landscape and enable the NRMA to contribute to Australia’s preparedness for V2G/V2X. The key objectives for this project to help unlock V2G/V2X potential in Australia are to:

  • understand the current state-of-the-art and consumer/NRMA member attitudes to V2G/V2X
  • build the necessary capacity, consensus, and collaboration amongst stakeholders
  • scope and initiate a demonstration project that tests and validates the value of V2G/V2X while adding to the existing knowledge base and current state-of-the-art
  • identify the role NRMA could play in the V2G/V2X ecosystem, including advocating for progressive policy positions to support this technology
  • produce a roadmap that articulates the steps needed to scale V2G/V2X from its current state.

Ultimately, this project will position Australia for a world-leading role in V2G/V2X deployment and provide additional value for NRMA members, energy consumers, the electricity grid, and Australia’s economy.

Learn more about V2G charging and its benefits

Coming soon...

Researchers

Years

  • 2024-2026

Funder

  • iMOVE CRC

Client

  • National Roads and Motorists Association (NRMA)

SDGs

Icon for SDG 7 Affordable and clean energy
SDG 9 Industry, innovation and infrastructure
Icon for SDG 11 Sustainable cities and communities

This project is working towards UN Sustainable Development Goals 7, 9 and 11.

Read about ISF's SDG work

Contact us

t: +61 2 9514 4950
e: isf@uts.edu.au

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Ultimo NSW 2007, Australia
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