EV Switch Will Hinge on Cheap Power Despite NatGas Swings
11/17 11:32 AM
EV Switch Will Hinge on Cheap Power Despite NatGas Swings Barani Krishnan DTN Refined Fuels Market Reporter SECAUCUS, NJ (DTN) -- For years, the commercial electric vehicle conversation was focused on overcoming technology hurdles and dampening high purchase costs with incentives. Now, the relative stability of wholesale power prices regardless of the swings in natural gas could decide if a fleet goes electric. With federal and state tax credits drying up and battery technology maturing, fleet operators are focusing their investment decisions on Total Cost of Ownership (TCO), prioritizing the low maintenance requirements and predictable fuel expenses that EVs offer. The cost of EV fuel electricity is not completely insulated from the energy market, but it provides immense relative stability compared to diesel. The stability argument holds because commercial electricity is heavily shielded from the volatility of its primary feedstocks. Diesel at U.S. pumps cost 9% more than a year ago at $3.837 gallon but natural gas futures are up 33% since November 2024 at $4.48 mmBtu. While natural gas is used to generate roughly 40% of U.S. power and the Henry Hub spot price is up one third from a year, the regulated price of power for commercial customers has moved up only 4% on the average over the same period to 14.2 cents kWh nationally, U.S. Energy Information Administration data shows. The strongest business case for EVs emerges when managers hedge against diesel's volatility as the fuel's price is intrinsically linked to vulnerable global crude oil markets. In a crisis scenario, the price increase for diesel is typically far more immediate and extreme than the corresponding, dampened increase in commercial electricity rates. If the cost of diesel starts at 20 cents per mile and electricity at 10 cents per mile, an energy crisis might push diesel to 35 cents while electricity only rises to 12 cents per mile. The savings margin for the converted fleet has widened from a prior 10 cents to 23 cents, after adding the 13-cent difference in crisis pricing. TCO studies show that refueling the Ford F-150 Lightning pickup truck with diesel costs approximately 15 to 24 cents per mile, versus two to 20 cents per mile cost for electricity. (c) Copyright 2025 DTN, LLC. All rights reserved.
 
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