WASHINGTON — The Biden administration proposed Thursday spending $15 billion to install 500,000 electric vehicle charging stations along roads, parking lots and apartment buildings, as part of its infrastructure plan now before Congress.
Some of the money would go toward grants and incentive programs for state and local governments as well as private companies to install the chargers, according to a fact sheet from the White House that spelled out the program in detail.
But $10 million would be devoted to research into ways to lower the cost of the chargers themselves, while $20 million would go community projects — like switching to electric school buses — that can pave the way to wider deployment.
The Transportation Department also issued guidance showing how nearly $42 billion of existing federal financing programs could be used for EV charging infrastructure.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg announced the plans during a news conference in the parking garage at Union Station in front of new EV charging stations.