September 2020 - Greater Cincinnati Automobile Dealers Association

California wants cars to run on electricity. It’s going to need a much bigger grid

The state has recently struggled with rolling blackouts due to tight power supplies. Going all electric in 15 years will dramatically increase electricity demand.

By Russell Gold, Wall Street Journal
Russell.Gold@wsj.com

Leaning on the hood of a shiny red electric Ford Mustang, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an executive order Wednesday to end the sale of new gas-burning cars in his state in 15 years.

Now comes the hard part.

Energy consultants and academics say converting all passenger cars and trucks to run on electricity in California could raise power demand by as much as 25%. That poses a major challenge for a state already facing periodic rolling blackouts as it rapidly transitions to renewable energy.

California will need to boost power generation, scale up its network of fast-charging stations, enhance its electric grid to handle the added load and hope that battery technology continues to improve enough that millions in America’s most populous state can handle long freeway commutes to schools and offices without problems.

“We’ve got 15 years to do the work,” said Pedro Pizarro, chief executive of Edison International, owner of Southern California Edison, a utility serving 15 million people in the state. “Frankly the state agencies are going to have to do their part. We’ve got to get to the permitting processes, the approvals; all of that work is going to have to get accelerated to meet [Wednesday’s] target.”

Switching from petroleum fuels to electricity to phase out the internal combustion engine won’t happen all at once—Mr. Newsom’s order applies to sales of new vehicles, so older gas-powered cars will be on the road in California for many years to come. But the mandate means the state will face a growing demand for megawatts.

California is already facing a shortfall of power supplies over the next couple of years. The problem was highlighted last month when a heat wave blanketed the western U.S. and the state’s grid operator instituted rolling blackouts on two occasions.

“It is too early to tell what kind of impact the order will have on our power grid, and we don’t have any specific analysis or projections,” said Anne Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for the California Independent System Operator, which runs the grid.

Currently, California faces a crunchtime in the early evening as solar power falls off and demand to power air conditioners remains relatively high. Car charging presents a new potential issue: What happens when too many drivers want a high-energy, fast charge at the same time?

Caroline Winn, the chief executive of San Diego Gas & Electric, a utility owned by Sempra Energy that serves 3.6 million people, said there will need to be rules and rates that encourage people to charge their cars at certain times of the day. The utility’s region consistently has excess energy during the middle of the day, she said. If consumers were incentivized to charge then, or overnight, it would reduce the costs of reaching the goal.

“We need to get the rules right and the markets right in order to resolve this issue because certainly California is moving that way,” she said.

The grid will need to be upgraded to prepare for millions of new electric vehicles. The majority of people who own them usually charge them at home, which would mean changes to substations and distribution circuits to accommodate multiple homes in a neighborhood drawing power to fill up batteries. The state’s three main investor-owned utilities are spending billions of dollars to harden the grid to prevent power equipment from sparking catastrophic wildfires.

“We have a hell of a lot of work to do nationally. California is ahead of everybody and they have a hell of a lot of work to do,” said Chris Nelder, who studies EV-grid integration at the Rocky Mountain Institute, an energy and environment-policy organization that promotes clean-energy solutions.

California will need to boost power generation, scale up its network of fast charging stations, enhance its electric grid to handle the added load and hope that battery technology continues to improve enough that millions in America’s most populous state can handle long freeway commutes to schools and offices without problems.

“We’ve got 15 years to do the work,” said Pedro Pizarro, chief executive of Edison International, owner of Southern California Edison, a utility serving 15 million people in the state. “Frankly the state agencies are going to have to do their part. We’ve got to get to the permitting processes, the approvals; all of that work is going to have to get accelerated to meet [Wednesday’s] target.”

Switching from petroleum fuels to electricity to phase out the internal combustion engine won’t happen all at once—Mr. Newsom’s order applies to sales of new vehicles, so older gas-powered cars will be on the road in California for many years to come. But the mandate means the state will face a growing demand for megawatts.

California is already facing a shortfall of power supplies over the next couple of years. The problem was highlighted last month when a heat wave blanketed the western U.S. and the state’s grid operator instituted rolling blackouts on two occasions.

“It is too early to tell what kind of impact the order will have on our power grid, and we don’t have any specific analysis or projections,” said Anne Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for the California Independent System Operator, which runs the grid.

Currently, California faces a crunchtime in the early evening as solar power falls off and demand to power air conditioners remains relatively high. Car charging presents a new potential issue: What happens when too many drivers want a high-energy, fast charge at the same time?

Caroline Winn, the chief executive of San Diego Gas & Electric, a utility owned by Sempra Energy that serves 3.6 million people, said there will need to be rules and rates that encourage people to charge their cars at certain times of the day. The utility’s region consistently has excess energy during the middle of the day, she said. If consumers were incentivized to charge then, or overnight, it would reduce the costs of reaching the goal.

“We need to get the rules right and the markets right in order to resolve this issue because certainly California is moving that way,” she said.

The grid will need to be upgraded to prepare for millions of new electric vehicles. The majority of people who own them usually charge them at home, which would mean changes to substations and distribution circuits to accommodate multiple homes in a neighborhood drawing power to fill up batteries. The state’s three main investor-owned utilities are spending billions of dollars to harden the grid to prevent power equipment from sparking catastrophic wildfires.

“We have a hell of a lot of work to do nationally. California is ahead of everybody and they have a hell of a lot of work to do,” said Chris Nelder, who studies EV-grid integration at the Rocky Mountain Institute, an energy and environment-policy organization that promotes clean-energy solutions.

Some see the growth of electric vehicles as an opportunity more than a challenge. In the afternoon, when electricity demand is high but the sun is setting and solar power drops off quickly, batteries in passenger cars, buses and other vehicles could release power back into the electric grid to help stabilize it, said Matt Petersen, chairman of the Transportation Electrification Partnership, a public-private effort in Los Angeles to accelerate the deployment of electric vehicles.

The idea is known as “vehicle-to-grid” and has been discussed in a number of countries expanding EV use, including the U.K. and Denmark.

“We end up with rolling batteries that can discharge power when needed,” Mr. Petersen said, adding, “The more electric vehicles we add to the grid, the more renewable energy we can add to the grid.”

One big hurdle for the widespread deployment of electric cars is driving down the cost of batteries to make the cars more affordable. This week, Tesla Inc. Chief Executive Elon Musk said he expected to have a $25,000 model ready by about 2023.

Shirley Meng, director of the Sustainable Power and Energy Center at the University of California, San Diego, said she believed batteries would continue to provide better performance at a lower cost.

“I am confident the battery technology is ready,” she said. Costs are expected to fall as new kinds of materials and metals can be used in the underlying battery chemistry, dropping prices. “Batteries are good now, and they will be better in the next 10 years.”

John Eichberger, executive director of the Fuels Institute, a nonprofit research group launched by the National Association of Convenience Stores, said he hoped that the California Air Resources Board, which is tasked with developing new rules to implement Mr. Newsom’s order, will slow the timeline if the market and electric build-out is running behind.

“We need to think about these critical infrastructure issues because transportation is not optional,” he said. “How do we develop a system that can guarantee consumers that they can get the energy when they need it?”

Car loans dodge distress for now

By Telis Demos, Wall Street Journal
telis.demos@wsj.com

Stimulus programs started to end in August. But so far, when it comes to auto loans the other shoe remains undropped.

As the coronavirus spread, the question on credit risk has been what would happen when borrowers stopped getting government support. That was particularly the case for areas that were showing signs of stress before the crisis struck, like auto loans.

In the early stages of the pandemic, auto loans started showing high rates of customers in deferral programs. But deferrals have yet to turn into waves of defaults. Nearly all of Ally Financial ’s deferrals—96 percent of them as of the end of August—have expired, the company said Tuesday. In total Ally offered Covid-19 assistance to about 30 percent of its auto-loan accounts, or to about 1.3 million customers. Of those, just 7 percent have exited deferral status to become 30-days-past-due delinquent or to be charged off. Huntington Bancshares reported a 30-day delinquency rate of 4 percent for its auto loans formerly in forbearance.

Late payments have ticked up a bit during the summer as stimulus faded, but they are still well below even recent historical levels. Capital One Financial ’s 30-day-plus auto delinquency rate was 3.63 percent in August, up 0.2 percentage point from July, but down more than 2.6 percentage points from a year earlier. Santander Consumer USA Holdings ’ rate of 7.98 percent in August was up more than a point from July, but still nearly seven points lower than a year earlier.

Credit losses are also being flattered by a surge in used-car demand and pricing—meaning repossessed cars are flipped for good value. Ally Financial updated its full-year forecast for auto-loan net losses to 1.3 percent from a range of 1.8 percent to 2.1 percent. In fact, the major negative right now is that demand for autos is such that banks that lend to dealers are seeing a decline in credit utilization because dealers are finding it hard to put cars on the floor.

Still, the all-clear signal hasn’t yet sounded. There is ample time for distress to emerge. Though most post-forbearance loans are not delinquent, they also aren’t all paid in full; for some borrowers, it just means they haven’t yet passed a due date. JPMorgan Chase finance chief Jennifer Piepszak observed new behavior during the pandemic, with people spending less and increasing their reserves, unlike during a typical downturn.

The question is how people will handle new delinquencies as forbearances end, especially if they still aren’t working when opportunities to spend in a reopened economy grow. “I think it’s easy to see that that could be the back half of 2021 before we really start to see those losses realized in a material way,” Ms. Piepszak said.

Investors don’t believe things will resolve all that favorably, with steep price-to-book discounts on stocks such as Ally and Capital One. Nor really do banks, which are reserved for quite substantial losses for 2021 and beyond based on macroeconomic indicators like unemployment.

However, it’s worth keeping an open mind on whether things play out as investors or bank models expect, especially for big public lenders that have mostly avoided lending to the lower parts of the credit spectrum in recent years. Ally finance chief Jennifer LaClair noted that car payments have always been a priority for borrowers, and that Covid-19 has if anything “accelerated the importance of the auto to the consumer,” citing declining ride-share and public-transit utilization.

Defensive driving is only smart up to a point. Being overly cautious can be a danger, too.

Congratulations to our Cincinnati Children’s and Evenflo safety seat giveaway winners

We’re teamed with our friends at Cincinnati Children’s and Evenflo to celebrate Child Passenger Safety Month by giving away six one six Evenflo® EveryFit™ 4-in-1 Car Seats and/or one of six Evenflo Maestro™ Sport Harness Booster seats!

Congrats to our winners and thanks to all who entered. 

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