Rampant theft at charging stations is emerging as a new problem for the Biden-Harris administration’s broad electric vehicle (EV) push, Bloomberg News reported Monday. [emphasis, links added]
Thieves nationwide are targeting public EV charger stations to extract the copper inside charging cables and sell it for cash, particularly in places like Seattle, Las Vegas, and Oakland, Bloomberg News reported.
Inconsistent charger performance already troubles consumers contemplating making the switch, and executives at top EV charging companies are working on solutions to address the rising tide of theft and vandalism against their equipment.
“It’s all over the country,” Rick Wilmer, president and CEO of ChargePoint, told Bloomberg News. “The types of stuff we’ve seen happen is just horrifying in terms of the way they go about it and how frequently it happens.”
In just a single day earlier this year, criminals cut into several cables at an EV charging station near ChargePoint headquarters in Silicon Valley, and the company estimates that about 80% of the vandalism incidents it records involve cord-cutting, according to Bloomberg News.
About 20% of all attempts to charge an EV are unsuccessful, and 10% of those failures are due to broken or completely missing cables.
The uptick in property crime against EV chargers is “front and center for us and has been really since the start of the year,” Anthony Lambkin, Electrify America’s vice president of operations, told Bloomberg News.
Thus far in 2024, the company has seen 215 of its charging cables damaged, a substantial increase from the 79 damaged cords it recorded in the year-earlier period.
Copper is valuable, but thieves looking to make EV vandalism a highly lucrative enterprise would have to steal at scale to generate considerable volumes of cash, according to Bloomberg News.
“The financial reward hardly justifies the risk and effort involved,” Travis Allan, the chief legal and public affairs office for FLO, a company that oversees an EV charger network, told Bloomberg News.
However, repairing the damaged equipment is costly for the companies that own it: replacements for slower-charging cables can cost up to $700 apiece while replacing the type of cables that charge EVs more quickly can cost as much as $4,000, Bloomberg News reported.
Companies that are dealing with increased property crimes against their gear are exploring a range of strategies to counter the trend, such as using cameras and loudspeakers to scare potential thieves away.
To Sara Rafalson, the executive director of policy for a charging company called EVgo, there is one simple fix that ought to be pursued. “Ultimately, there needs to be a larger law enforcement response to this,” Rafalson told Bloomberg News.
Read rest at Daily Caller
They can’t put charging stations in the middle of no where and not expect copper theft. Charging stations need the same setup as filling stations with attendants on site.
Most people don’t know how big of a problem copper theft is. There have been cases of thieves breaking into unoccupied houses and stealing the wiring. I remember seeing a ten foot high roll of some kind of cable. There was a big sign on it, “Contains no Metal.” There are a lot of causes to this problem. One is the declining morality. The other is the price of energy. As the cost of energy goes up, so does the cost of metal.