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Thieves hunting for copper are vandalizing EV chargers
Financial Post ^ | September 23, 2024 | Kyle Stock and Tope Alake

Posted on 09/24/2024 11:23:35 AM PDT by Red Badger

Nearly 20% of U.S. public charging attempts ended in failure, with roughly 10% of those aborted sessions were due to a damaged or missing cable

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Rick Wilmer spends most of his work days at the office. But every so often, the chief executive officer of ChargePoint Holdings Inc. will make his way to the company’s laboratory in San Jose, Calif., where he dons safety glasses and wields an array of saws and shears against EV chargers. The goal: to approximate the rash of vandalism sweeping the 65,000 U.S. cords under ChargePoint’s care.

“It’s all over the country,” Wilmer says. “The types of stuff we’ve seen happen is just horrifying in terms of the way they go about it and how frequently it happens.”

ChargePoint isn’t alone. This year through June, nearly one in five U.S. public charging attempts ended in failure, according to JD Power; roughly 10 per cent of those aborted sessions were due to a damaged or missing cable. While some of the destruction is without agenda — the same spray-paint and baseball-bat havoc that affects vending machines and delivery robots — charging executives say much of the damage has a specific, profit-based motive: copper.

There have been similar reports of vandalism in Europe, and in May Instavolt Ltd. — a U.K. charger operator — warned of a crackdown on cord theft. But the mayhem comes at a particularly tough time in the U.S., where sales of electric cars are flagging. A reliable charging network is key to dousing drivers’ range anxiety, and charging companies are eager to disabuse EV-skeptical consumers of the notion that public stations are inconvenient, slow and often broken.

Vandalizing a public EV plug isn’t much more complicated than stealing a bicycle. Charging stations tend to be inconspicuous, tucked into the quiet corners of shopping centres and municipal parking lots. Almost all of them are unmanned, and cutting a cord can be as simple as severing it from the station with a hacksaw.

Vandalism is “front and centre for us and has been really since the start of the year,” says Anthony Lambkin, vice president of operations at Electrify America, which manages about 1,000 charging stations in North America. In 2024 so far, vandals have cut 215 of the company’s cords, up from 79 in the year-earlier period.

FLO, which runs just under 3,700 charging stations in North America, has also seen an uptick in vandalism this year, though it says most damage to its cables is accidental. Recently, seven of the company’s fast-charging cords were cut in a single week.

Wilmer has that beat: On one day this summer, thieves cut multiple cords at the station just outside ChargePoint’s Silicon Valley headquarters. And across the company’s network, four in five vandalism cases involve cut cords. Nationwide, charging executives say the issue is more pronounced in urban centers, with particularly consistent problems in Las Vegas, Seattle, and Oakland, Calif.

Article content Many of these cord bandits are on the hunt for copper. The metal is a critical vein in the fast-growing circulatory system of public charging, and prices have roughly doubled since a nadir in early 2020. Construction, tech gadgets and the strengthening U.S. economy at large are also driving up copper demand.

The profit motive is reflected in the nature of the vandalism, which is often more organized than opportunist. Groups of thieves will cut every cord in a station, taking it offline entirely. Electrify America has also seen copper wiring mined from its charging units, and from underground conduits. EVgo Inc., which operates nearly 1,000 US stations, has security footage of perpetrators wearing uniforms to make themselves look like utility workers or technicians.

“Ultimately, there needs to be a larger law enforcement response to this,” says Sara Rafalson, EVgo’s executive director of policy.

Stealing at scale may also be the only way for thieves to get a decent return on investment. One slow-charging cable, known as a Level 2 charger, contains about 5 pounds of copper; at the moment, that equates to about $21. A Level 3 cord — the kind found at fast-charging stations — has about twice as much.

Article content “The financial reward hardly justifies the risk and effort involved,” says Travis Allan, chief legal and public affairs officer at FLO.

For charging companies, the theft can add up quickly: Level 2 cords cost about $700 apiece to replace, while fast-charging conduits can reach $4,000. Most charger operators are working on technological solutions to minimize those costs, including automated surveillance. FLO’s chargers, for example, have 200 different sensors — including one that can detect a cut cord. But it’s almost impossible to automatically catch every form of casual mayhem.

“It’s very tough to put an alarm on spray paint,” says Yann Benoit, senior director of charging operations at FLO.

Cameras and other proactive monitoring can also get prohibitively expensive, and raise privacy concerns. FLO is testing new chargers that have a camera inside — much like an ATM — but only plans to activate the cameras in areas with high levels of vandalism. Electrify America now has cameras at about 100 of its stations and is deploying speakers that will essentially holler at would-be thieves.

Article content ChargePoint is leaning on drivers as its first line of defense. Last month, the company’s app began prompting users to flag busted stations, asking them to categorize the problem and submit a photo. Wilmer says the update will help the company identify and fix vandalized chargers more quickly, ideally in less than a day.

“We’ve put a ton of investment into this area,” he says, adding that the company is more focused on keeping chargers consistently operational for drivers than lowering its repair costs.

At its San Jose lab, ChargePoint is also examining how vandals execute their task, and what it might do to make that harder. Wilmer’s engineers scour YouTube for videos of thieves cracking bike locks — a process not unlike cord theft — and ChargePoint is among the companies racing to develop an uncuttable cord. It’s trickier than it sounds: Heavy-duty sheathing would help, but it also make the hoses heavier, less malleable and more difficult to cool.

In short, the vandals, at the moment, have the edge.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Military/Veterans; Outdoors; Society
KEYWORDS: automotive; chargers; copper; crime; ev; theft
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

Don’t the left hate Tesla? Hmmm


41 posted on 09/24/2024 2:23:53 PM PDT by TribalPrincess2U (Bye done!)
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To: Red Badger

I’ve heard that good Samaritans all over the US have come up with a method to deter these thefts. People who live close to an EV charger and own pets are encouraged to put on rubber gloves collect cat or dog waste and smear it on the charging handle and cord of your nearest EV charger, being sure to apply it generously from one end of the cable to the other. If you don’t own a pet just get some pet waste from a neighbor. If we all help with this EV cable theft can be stopped.


42 posted on 09/24/2024 4:00:14 PM PDT by cquiggy (Ck)
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To: allblues

It’s not easy for EV proponents to come up with common sense solutions, otherwise they would realize EV’s suck.
But it would be very easy to build a reel into each charging station which would release the cable when you agree to pay for charging and end by reeling the cable back in when you were finished.
Damn that was Hard !


43 posted on 09/24/2024 4:05:41 PM PDT by cquiggy (Ck)
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To: Red Badger

Gee, who didn’t see that coming?


44 posted on 09/24/2024 4:07:36 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: monkeyshine

“every day 100s of people drive off with the handle still connected to the car”

Hundreds? I doubt it’s that high.


45 posted on 09/24/2024 4:20:46 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom (May the soy boys, feminazis, and alphabet weirdos choke on the toxic fumes of our masculinity)
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To: TribalPrincess2U

I think it’s Musk they hate, not his company.

But, you’re right. Do they hate Musk or global warming more?


46 posted on 09/24/2024 4:27:37 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom (May the soy boys, feminazis, and alphabet weirdos choke on the toxic fumes of our masculinity)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

But, you’re right. Do they hate Musk or global warming more?


The Issue is never The Issue.


47 posted on 09/24/2024 4:28:23 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dfwgator

We all know that “The Issue” with leftists is implementing global communism and total control over all people.

It’s so hard to believe it has come to that in the USA, but there is no denying it.


48 posted on 09/24/2024 4:31:50 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom (May the soy boys, feminazis, and alphabet weirdos choke on the toxic fumes of our masculinity)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

I read that in one gas station it happens 3-5 times a month. (Google: “ Driving away from a gas station with a gas pump attached is relatively common, and can happen multiple times a month at a single station”). So I extrapolated and then cut the number. But there is a reason these pumps are now installed with breakaway valves. Easier to repair on site.


49 posted on 09/24/2024 5:44:46 PM PDT by monkeyshine (live and let live is dead)
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To: Red Badger

The obvious solution is to keep the cables at 400+ V AC when idle so anyone cutting them even in gloves gets 400 to 800’volts even in rubber gloves why AC because it locks human muscles tight on the current source you can’t let go then just let nature take its course. let the amps flow for a couple of minutes the problem self resolves. Put this on national news and the Darwin award winners will deter the rest. Society doesn’t need thieves they should all be put to death like in olden times anyway.


50 posted on 09/24/2024 8:47:14 PM PDT by GenXPolymath
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To: Bonemaker

Look daddy, a sleeping bat.


51 posted on 09/24/2024 9:07:21 PM PDT by Keyhopper (Indians had bad immigration laws)
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To: GenXPolymath

I like the way you think, Son!!!


52 posted on 09/24/2024 9:33:55 PM PDT by szweig (HYHEY Have You Had Enough Yet??!?)
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To: monkeyshine

I Googled “Number of times cars drive away with gas nozzle” and found nothing but explanations about how the nozzle works and shuts off automatically.

Amazing that it happens that often at one station.

I just found in 2014 - 2017 there were 115,000 gas stations operating in the USA. So even 1 drive-away per day is 300 total per day. One drive-away per week would be 45 per day.

Yikes!


53 posted on 09/24/2024 9:47:59 PM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom (May the soy boys, feminazis, and alphabet weirdos choke on the toxic fumes of our masculinity)
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To: Red Badger

bttt


54 posted on 09/24/2024 9:52:27 PM PDT by linMcHlp
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To: szweig

I am oldskool that way. For any theft of property or wilful property destruction,sabotage or vandalism, same for pedos, rapists and drug dealers. Society simply has no use or need to keep any of them breathing any longer. Swift public executions and the problem solves itself.


55 posted on 09/24/2024 10:59:37 PM PDT by GenXPolymath
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To: GenXPolymath

Illegls who manage to get a car are also robbing cars for parts.


56 posted on 09/24/2024 11:02:02 PM PDT by caww (O death, when you seized my Lord, you lost your grip on me......)
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To: Keyhopper

“Yes son, he rests dhring daylight”


57 posted on 09/25/2024 3:28:07 AM PDT by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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To: GenXPolymath

Lawsuits would be forthcoming.................


58 posted on 09/25/2024 5:16:39 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Jeff Chandler
"A business model based upon a high level of honor will never work in a society which tolerates crime."

John Adams said, “Our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” Morality and virtue are the foundation of our republic and necessary for a society to be free.

This is as true today as it as every been.! If there is NO law and order, the Republic is lost.

59 posted on 09/25/2024 5:23:18 AM PDT by unread (I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the REPUBLIC..!)
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To: ridesthemiles

SELL THE VEHICLE WITH AN “UMBILICAL CORD” that is carried in the vehicle.
= = =

So the catilitic convertor theives will now just pry open the car trunk for the cord?


60 posted on 09/25/2024 8:13:55 AM PDT by Scrambler Bob (Running Rampant, and not endorsing nonsense; My pronoun is EXIT. And I am generally full of /S)
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