
The number of public electric vehicle loading ports in the Washington state has doubled more than in the last four years. There are now more than 2,600 charging stations open to the public, offering about 7,000 charging ports, up to about 3,500 ports in 2021.But this rapid expansion is only the beginning of the Washington State Department of Transportation Department’s efforts to support and promote a switching to EVS.
There were more than 200,000 EVs registered in the Evergreen State in 2024, which was more than 20% of new vehicle sales. In order to meet current and future demands for EV collection infrastructure, WSDOT was associated with the Washington State Department of Commerce to create the EV-MAP Map and Planning tool, an interactive map based on ESRI Sig technology that brings together 100 public data sets related to infrastructure and demand EV. Among the layers of the map are existing charging stations, EV (projects awarded by Grant not yet built), traffic counts and pre-modelled travel routes, as well as EV records and needs planned by the group and the Blogs Group. Pre-Model travel and traffic counts can help motorists planning travel.
The tool is designed for local governments, public services and companies to evaluate and plan their future EV. State agencies can access and share data related to EVs, adding their data to the map layers. “ It is intended for the planners and communities that are planned to invest in EV collection, to know where the best places to collect infrastructure would be, to plan to see how many electric vehicles are probably registered in their communities, so they know how many loaders may need in the future, ” says Tonia Buell, responsible for alternative fuels programs in WSDOT.
He points out that the Mapping tool also offers a way to coordinate -among all the state agencies participating in an EV space that have grant programs and can help communities or private developers that seek to invest in load infrastructure. Some parts of the neighboring states and Canada are included in the data sets behind EV-MAP.
Click any existing load site, provides the user information such as what type of loader is and which connector has (such as Tesla Supercharger, combined load system or J1772) and the speed with which they can be loaded. Other information available includes what type of energy origin enhances the loader, such as renewable hydroelectric energy. EV registration data can be seen through the map layers. Planters can examine data such as overloaded communities, a data set that fuses various data sources to identify the census roads where vulnerable populations are facing environmental and health impacts and if they are underestimated. The communities defined as disadvantages are included by the screening tool of climate and federal economic justice.
“This has been one of the main markets from the beginning,” says Buell, who created the West Coast electric road network, which was opened in 2012 throughout Interstate 5, 99 road and other important roads in British Columbia, Washington, Oregon and California. Buell says: “It is growing. EVs are here to stay in the state of Washington and we want to ensure that people can find places to charge. It is really important for the anxiety of the range.”
Buell says WSDOT wants the fence people to buy an EV to know that EV-MAP can provide information on their travels daily and long distance.
Much of the EV infrastructure development planned in Washington is funded by aid approved by the state legislature. Buell says that the collaborations of vehicles-infrastructures, a private public collaboration subsidies program to collect infrastructure through WSDOT and private developers, have helped create hundreds of charging sites along roads that would otherwise not have available collections because they may not be profitable enough to boost private investment.
Buell adds that the following challenge is the transition of class 2B to class 8 gas trucks to electric or hydrogen power.
