Current:Home > ContactDetroit touts country's first wireless-charging public road for electric vehicles -Capitatum
Detroit touts country's first wireless-charging public road for electric vehicles
View
Date:2025-04-12 13:49:32
The Motor City can add a new claim to fame, as home to the country’s first wireless-charging public roadway for electric vehicles.
On Wednesday, members of the media got a chance to see it in action.
A blue electric Ford E-Transit commercial van was able to charge as it moved over a quarter-mile stretch of newly paved 14th Street, a short distance from the towering Michigan Central Station, thanks to rubber-coated copper coils buried underneath the road surface.
A large video screen set up for the occasion outside Newlab, the rehabilitated Book Depository, showed the kilowatts generated and the speed as the van made its passes on the street. Those numbers would fluctuate as the van moved along, 16 kw and 9 mph at one point, with the van at a 63% charge.
“It may seem small now, but it’s a huge step” in getting this to scale, Joshua Sirefman, CEO of Michigan Central, the Ford subsidiary running a “mobility innovation district” in Corktown, said before the demonstration began. “The implications are truly staggering.”
Not just any electric vehicle can pick up a charge just yet on 14th Street. The van was equipped with a special receiver to take the charge. The coils themselves are underneath the road surface, but a small section of the road was left unpaved to show how the coated coils would lie flat underneath. Two large boxes were positioned on the sidewalk to manage the coils.
The endeavor represents one piece of a public-private partnership aiming to show how this type of EV charging infrastructure could work in practice, and it follows up on an announcement by Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in September 2021 that the state planned to launch the first wireless-charging public road project in the country.
The Michigan Department of Transportation is working with Israel’s Electreon, one of the member companies at Newlab, and numerous partners to build what will eventually be a mile of inductive-charging roadway, including a larger piece on Michigan Avenue (construction there is slated for 2025). Electreon already has projects in the works in numerous other countries including Sweden, Germany, France, Italy, Norway, China and Israel.
Stefan Tongur, Electreon vice president of business development, said that the project is in use for buses in Israel that pay a fee to use the service.
The system is safe, he said, because each coil is individually connected and it only charges when a vehicle with a sensor is over the coil. He noted that the road surface is regular asphalt.
The inductive-charging roadway isn’t seen as any kind of complete solution to expanding the EV charging infrastructure. Rather, it would function as a range extender, to be paired with charging vehicles when they are stationary. These kinds of options would allow automakers to reduce the size of batteries, so that while cost might be added to the infrastructure to include such coils it would allow a reduction in cost on the vehicle end, Tongur said.
Here's why people aren't buying EVsin spite of price cuts and tax breaks.
The cost for this project, according to MDOT, is $1.9 million in state funds and $4 million from the Electreon team and others.
MDOT Director Brad Wieferich called the project revolutionary for EVs. The state and its partners would use this project as a “springboard” to both learn and “to see how we can scale this up,” he said.
Contact Eric D. Lawrence: elawrence@freepress.com.
veryGood! (12596)
Related
- NCAA President Charlie Baker would be 'shocked' if women's tournament revenue units isn't passed
- Judge dismisses lawsuit by sorority sisters who sought to block a transgender woman from joining
- NHL offseason grades: Pittsburgh Penguins, Toronto Maple Leafs make the biggest news
- Do your portfolio results differ from what the investment fund reports? This could be why.
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- 10 people charged in kidnapping and death of man from upstate New York homeless encampment
- Democratic nominee for Mississippi secretary of state withdraws campaign amid health issues
- Medicaid expansion won’t begin in North Carolina on Oct. 1 because there’s still no final budget
- A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
- What are the hurricane categories and what do they mean? Here's a breakdown of the scale and wind speeds
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Bachelor Nation's Hannah Brown Engaged to Adam Woolard
- Benches clear twice in an inning as Rays hand Yankees another series defeat
- Houston Astros' Jose Altuve completes cycle in 13-5 rout of Boston Red Sox
- Vance jokes he’s checking out his future VP plane while overlapping with Harris at Wisconsin airport
- 'Rich Men North of Richmond,' 'Sound of Freedom' and the conservative pop culture moment
- Influencer Brianna Chickenfry Responds to Criticism of Zach Bryan Romance
- The Fate of The Idol Revealed Following Season One
Recommendation
New Orleans mayor’s former bodyguard making first court appearance after July indictment
Jessica Simpson Reveals If She'd Do a Family Reality Show After Newlyweds
DeSantis booed at vigil for Jacksonville shooting victims
Tropical Storm Idalia set to become hurricane as Florida schools close, DeSantis expands state of emergency
Big Lots store closures could exceed 300 nationwide, discount chain reveals in filing
Adele Says She Wants to Be a “Mom Again Soon”—and Reveals Baby Name Rich Paul Likes
Alabama presses effort to execute inmate by having him breathe pure nitrogen. And the inmate agrees.
'Like a baseball bat to the kneecaps': Michigan's Jim Harbaugh weighs in on suspension