Consumer preferences and willingness to pay for EV charging: Implications for incentives to promote off-peak charging and renewables integration
Aviv Steren, Yael Parag, Naama Teschner, Shiri Zemah-Shamir
Abstract
Electric vehicle (EV) charging patterns are expected to strain electricity grids, particularly during peak residential demand in the evening. Demand-side management emerges as a potential strategy to manage this surge and align demand with supply constraints. This study investigates consumer preferences related to electric vehicle charging, focusing on the determinants influencing charging decisions during periods of electricity supply constraints or renewable energy abundance. We employ a discrete choice experiment on a representative sample of the Israeli population to assess preferences for various charging scenarios and extrapolate marginal willingness to pay values to understand the effectiveness of different incentive schemes. Key findings include a preference for evening charging, with average discounts of 20% to shift demand to nighttime, 23% to daytime, and 37% to weekends. Distinct preferences were observed among Sabbath observers, suggesting that lifestyle factors influence charging patterns. Based on our analysis, a 0.07 USD/kWh discount is needed to incentivize daytime charging, while marginal willingness to pay for green electricity reaches 0.06 USD/kWh, suggesting that communicating the renewable share in the energy mix may help reduce the discount needed. We also find that uniform tariffs may create unintended consequences, such as new peak loads in high-EV, low-renewable regions. Therefore, we recommend regionally differentiated time-of-use tariffs, further refined by season, day type, and time of day. These findings support the design of targeted incentives that reflect consumer preferences while improving grid resilience and renewable energy integration, especially in isolated electricity systems like Israel. • EV charging increases evening peak load and challenges grid stability. • Discrete choice experiment reveals time-based EV charging preferences. • 20–37% discounts required to shift demand from evening to off-peak periods. • Communicating green energy use may offset needed daytime charging discounts. • Lifestyle and regional factors call for tailored, flexible tariff designs.