Japan Retailers, Gas Stations Installing EV Chargers
Low rates of charging, at only several hundred yen each, are unlikely to bring in substantial revenue, but convenience stores, supermarkets and gas stations hope that frequent use of battery chargers by drivers will help boost overall revenues from their mainstay operations. Major supermarket chain operator Aeon Co. installed quick charging equipment for electric vehicles at a new shopping center opened last autumn in Saitama Prefecture, north of Tokyo. Park24 Co., which operates 24-hour automated parking facilities, has installed a total of 19 battery chargers in parking lots in Tokyo and neighboring Kanagawa Prefecture. Showa Shell Sekiyu K.K. will soon install a high-speed battery charger at a gas station in Kanagawa, while Cosmo Oil Co. plans to do so at three gas stations in the same prefecture by March next year. The private sector-led efforts to improve infrastructure for electric vehicles are drawing public support. From the current fiscal year, which started in April, the Japanese government shoulders half of the costs of purchasing quick battery chargers, priced at about 3.5 million yen each. The Tokyo metropolitan government and the government of Kanagawa Prefecture also launched their own subsidy programs. (June 20, 2009)