News Release

Louisiana Clean Fuels Selects CSE’s Caret Software for IIJA EV Charger Deployment

 
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Louisiana Clean Fuels

CSE to help determine optimal sites for EV charging

The Center for Sustainable Energy (CSE) will assist Louisiana Clean Fuels in developing a comprehensive electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure plan for the state using CSE’s Caret® EV Infrastructure Planner.

Louisiana expects to receive about $75 million from the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) over the next five years to deploy EV chargers along highway corridors and in rural areas. States have until August 1 to submit a plan outlining how they would use the funds. Louisiana Clean Fuels is working on the plan.

How Caret pinpoints EV charging sites

CSE’s Caret software can forecast the need for EV charging in Louisiana, pinpoint and prioritize sites for public charging, and recommend the types and amounts of charging to install at each location.

CSE will develop a unique, mathematical weighting of charging priorities based on LCF outreach to stakeholders and data such as demographics, utility infrastructure and existing EV charging.

Caret then applies multi-criteria decision analysis to rank sites based on the priorities and data and creates a customized map of the optimal spots for EV charging.

“We are looking forward to working with the Center for Sustainable Energy to make the most of this unprecedented investment in our fueling infrastructure. Louisiana and our coalition can lead the nation by developing a smart, effective and forward-looking plan to decarbonize our transportation systems,” said Ann Vail, Louisiana Clean Fuels Executive Director and Clean Cities Coordinator.

“We are excited to work with Louisiana Clean Fuels to prioritize the state’s EV charging needs and pinpoint just the right locations for chargers. With community engagement and data-driven planning, we can determine optimal sites near heavily traveled roadways and commercial areas while prioritizing EV charging access for residents of low-income communities and multi-unit housing,” said Zach Henkin, CSE Director of EV Program Research.

More publicly available EV charging is needed to spur greater adoption of EVs to help reduce air pollution that harms human health and carbon emissions that contribute to climate change impacts such as rising sea levels and more frequent and intense extreme weather.

 

Center for Sustainable Energy® (CSE) is a national nonprofit that is transforming markets for clean transportation and distributed energy through software-enabled program design and administration. CSE has more than a decade of experience designing and administering over $1 billion in EV and EV charging incentive programs for states and utilities across the U.S.

Louisiana Clean Fuels is a nonprofit U.S. Department of Energy Clean Cities Coalition, supported by the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources and member organizations. The mission of Louisiana Clean Fuels, Inc. is to advance the nation’s environmental, economic, and energy security by supporting local actions to diversify transportation fuel options.