Electric vehicle charging stations installed at P.E.I. National Park - Action News
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PEI

Electric vehicle charging stations installed at P.E.I. National Park

Parks Canada now has one public charging station at the Dalvay Trailhouse and one station that will be used to charge the park's new electric staff vehicle.

Public charging station is located at Dalvay Trailhouse visitor centre

Visitors will now be able to charge their electric vehicles for as long as they need at P.E.I. National Park. (Laura Meader/CBC)

Parks Canada now has charging stations for electric cars in the P.E.I. National Park.

One station, which is located at the DalvayTrailhousevisitor centre within the park,will beavailable for public use. The other will be used to charge the park's newstaff vehicle,a Nissan Leaf that was purchased as part of the federal Greening Government initiative thataimsto transition80 per cent of government vehicles to zero-emissionsby 2030.

Thestations were installed this winter and park staff saythe public charger is now ready for visitors to use 24 hours a day.

"So if the travelling public are, for example, coming to the beach they're welcome to park beside our Trailhouse washroom building, plug in and charge the vehicle and come back to the vehicle after they've finished at the beach," said P.E.I. National Park asset manager Bill Courtney.

Courtney said visitors are free to charge their car for as long as they need, whether "they're going for a meal or they're going overnight."

'We expect to see more and more'

The chargers are both Level 2 stations, meaning they may take up to eight hours to fully charge a completely drained battery.

The charging station is a Level-2, which can take about eight hours to fully charge an empty vehicle battery says Bill Courtney. (Laura Meader/CBC)

But visitors canuse it for a much shorter charging time if that's what they need, said Courtney.

Courtney saidParks Canada does not currentlyhave any rules in placefor how long someone can keep their car connected to the charging station.

"If it becomes an issue about people lining up waiting to charge vehicles then we might establish, in the future, some guidelines about the maximum length of time," Courtney said.

The public charging station is located at the Dalvay Trailhouse visitor centre. (Laura Meader/CBC)

The organization installedthe charging stations near theDalvay operations centre in order to monitor how much it's being used andto troubleshoot any problems.

"There's not a lot of electric vehicles on P.E.I. but as the years go by, we expect to see more and more electric vehicles on the road," Courtney said.

Courtney also said Parks Canada hopes to add charging stations to more of its P.E.I. locations, like Ardgowan in Charlottetown as well asin Cavendish and Greenwich.

Those potential additions all depend on how much visitors useDalvay's stationand on its financial viability.

Whether they go ahead or not, Courtney thinks this first station makes a difference.

"It certainly makes sense from a green or climate change point of view," said Courtney about both the new staff vehicle and charging stations. "And hopefully at the end of its life it demonstrates that it makes financial sense as well."

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