The funds approved today will result in nearly 17,000 new chargers for passenger vehicles statewide. Over 152,000 public and shared private chargers are
installed today. Combined with previous investment plans, funding from
the federal government, electric utilities and other programs, the
state expects to reach 250,000 chargers in the next few years. In
addition to the public network, the state estimates that more than
500,000 private home chargers are installed statewide.
The
funds will become available over the next four years and distributed to
projects through competitive grants. Projects include direct incentive
and rebate programs for businesses, non-profit organizations, tribes
and public agencies.
Why this matters
First
created in 2007, the Clean Transportation Program is one of the first
transportation-focused funding efforts established to help advance the
state’s climate change policies. To date, $2.3 billion has been
invested in projects supporting ZEV infrastructure, alternative fuels
and advanced vehicle technologies, providing the following benefits.
- Community benefits: 63% of funding awarded in disadvantaged or low-income communities.
- Chargers installed: Nearly 34,700 EV chargers installed or planned.
- Hydrogen stations: 96 public hydrogen fueling stations installed or planned.
- Car charging incentives: Creation of the California Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Project to provide streamlined incentives for EV chargers.
- Truck and bus incentives: $100 million to 120 projects awarded
for truck and bus charging and refueling through the Energy
Infrastructure Incentives for Zero-Emission Commercial Vehicles Project.
- Zero-emission school buses: 2,300 clean school buses funded, with 1,100 ZEV school buses on the road.
- Manufacturing: 40 ZEV and ZEV-related manufacturing projects that support in-state economic growth.
- Job training: Workforce training for more than 32,000 trainees and trainers, helping prepare workers for the clean transportation economy.
California’s strategy for a clean transportation transition
This
is a major milestone on California’s path to a clean transportation
future. In addition to advancing ZEVs, which topped 26.4% of all new
California vehicle sales in the third quarter of 2024, the Newsom
Administration is prioritizing clean fuel production, public transit
and rail infrastructure enhancements, and a cleaner, smarter electric
grid to help power it all. As California works toward this clean
transportation future, the state is also advancing efforts to prevent
gasoline price spikes.