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On Jun 13, 2024 at 3:31:22 PM PDT, "moviePig" <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:He was wearing a mask against fumes from the electricity.
On 6/13/2024 6:00 PM, BTR1701 wrote:This guy was still wearing a mask outdoors in 2024, so I suspect he'll be atOn Jun 13, 2024 at 1:36:30 PM PDT, "anim8rfsk" <anim8rfsk@cox.net> wrote:>
moviePig <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:My favorite EV moment was the idiot who we saw standing next to his car atOn 6/12/2024 8:20 PM, BTR1701 wrote:>I've noticed that several of the EV charging stations at my local mallSounds like you'd want to strongly discourage this particular theft...
seem to
have the cables ripped out. (There are also huge swaths of L.A. that
are now
dark at night because thieves have ripped apart streetlights to steal the
copper inside.) So now even if you happen to find one of the rare chargers
that can 'fuel-up' your EV, you're likely to find it useless due to
thievery.
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DETROIT (AP) — Just before 2AM on a chilly April night in Seattle, a
Chevrolet
Silverado pickup stopped at an electric vehicle charging station on
the edge
of a shopping center parking lot. Two men, one with a light strapped
to his
head, got out. A security camera recorded them pulling out bolt
cutters. One
man snipped several charging cables; the other loaded them into the truck.
In
under 2½ minutes, they were gone.
The scene that night has become part of a troubling pattern across the
country: Thieves have been targeting EV charging stations, intent on
stealing
the cables, which contain copper wiring. The price of copper is near a
record
high on global markets, which means criminals stand to collect rising sums
of
cash from selling the material.
The stolen cables often disable entire stations, forcing EV owners on the
road
to search desperately for a working charger. For the owners, the
predicament
can be exasperating and stressful.
Broken-down chargers have emerged as the latest obstacle for U.S.
automakers
in their strenuous effort to convert more Americans to EVs despite
widespread
public anxiety about a scarcity of charging stations. About 4 in 10 U.S.
adults say they believe EVs take too long to charge or don't know of any
charging stations nearby.
If even finding a charging station doesn't necessarily mean finding
functioning cables, it becomes one more reason for skeptical buyers to
stick
with traditional gasoline-fueled or hybrid vehicles, at least for now.
Two years ago, according to Electrify America, which runs the nation’s
second-largest network of direct-current fast chargers, a cable might
be cut
perhaps every six months at one of its 968 charging stations, with 4,400
plugs
nationwide. Through May this year, the figure reached 129-- four more than
in
all of 2023. At one Seattle station, cables were cut six times in the past
year, said Anthony Lambkin, Electrify America's vice president of
operations.
"We're enabling people to get to work, to take their kids to school,
get to
medical appointments," Lambkin said. "So to have an entire station that's
offline is pretty impactful to our customers."
Until a month ago, police in Houston knew of no cable thefts. Then one was
stolen from a charger at a gas station. The city has now recorded eight or
nine such thefts, said Sgt. Robert Carson, who leads a police metal-theft
unit.
In one case, thieves swiped 18 of 19 cords at a Tesla station. That day,
Carson visited the station to inspect the damage. In the first five
minutes
that he was there, Carson said, about 10 EVs that needed charging had
to be
turned away. In very large cities like Houston, charging stations
typically
contain an especially large number of plugs and cables, so thefts can be
particularly damaging. "They're not just taking one," Carson said. "When
they're hit, they're hit pretty hard."
The charging companies say it’s become clear that the thieves are
after the
copper that the cables contain. In late May, copper hit a record high of
nearly $5.20 a pound, a result, in part, of rising demand resulting from
efforts to cut carbon emissions with EVs that use more copper wiring. The
price is up about 25% from a year ago, and many analysts envision further
increases.
Charging companies say there isn’t actually very much copper in the
cables,
and what copper is there is difficult to extract. Carson estimates that
criminals can get $15 to $20 per cable at a scrap yard. "They're not
making a
significant amount of money," he said. "They're not going to be
sailing on a
yacht anywhere."
Still, the more cables the thieves can steal, the more they can cash
in. At
$20 a cable, 20 stolen cables could fetch $400.
The problem for the charging companies is that it’s much costlier to
replace
cables. In Minneapolis, where cables have been clipped at city-owned
charging
stations, it costs about $1,000 to replace just one cable, said Joe
Laurin,
project manager in the Department of Public Works.
Sounds like whoever’s charging $1000 a cable may be the real crook
the
mall, holding the charger the same way people hold the gas nozzle while
filling up. He was "pumping" electricity into his car, I guess.
I bet a lot of people do that ...once.
it for a while.
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