Honolulu’s New Airport Rental Center Has Lots Of Electric Cars But Only One Charging Station
Activists say that’s a big blunder. And lawmakers are moving to require all new state buildings be designed with EV charging stations.
Activists say that’s a big blunder. And lawmakers are moving to require all new state buildings be designed with EV charging stations.
In announcing the opening of a new, $377 million at Honolulu鈥檚 airport in December 2021, the state Transportation Department heralded the convenience it would offer air passengers and its 鈥渆nvironmentally friendly construction practices鈥 and 鈥渆nergy efficient fixtures.鈥
But one modern green transportation convenience was conspicuously absent from the five-story structure, which is massive enough to house 10 rental car company offices and their fleets. The department didn鈥檛 include a single charging station for electric vehicles in the finished product, or even a single charger-ready parking stall.
To sustainability advocates, it was an enormous oversight and missed opportunity.
“How could we shoot ourselves in both feet?鈥 asked Jeff Mikulina, a longtime sustainability expert considered an architect of Hawaii鈥檚 renewable energy policy.
Rep. Nicole Lowen, who chairs the Hawaii House Energy and Environmental Protection Committee, called the failure to include charging stations or EV-ready stalls in the facility 鈥渁 travesty.鈥
But at the Daniel K. Inouye International Airport’s rental car facility, the arrival of sleek Tesla EVs has preceded the installation of charging stations, at least the that can charge cars quickly. In fact, on a recent morning, there was a row of gleaming Teslas at Avis鈥 rental center but no charging stations in sight.
In a statement, Kelly Kunishige, communications manager with the Department of Transportation, said the rental car company Sixt has one EV charger on Level 4 of the rental car building, although she said the department didn’t know whether it was a basic Level 1 charger or a faster Level 2 charger. In addition, she said, Hertz has submitted plans to install 12 Level 2 chargers.
Avis workers at the facility told Civil Beat that the only chargers were slow-charging 鈥減lug-in鈥 devices.
鈥淎vis has plans to implement EV charging stations across all airports in Hawaii,鈥 the company said in a statement. 鈥淲e have most recently installed charging units at Kahului airport and have installation plans at Honolulu International Airport as well.鈥
Ed Sniffen, the acting director of the Department of Transportation, said the department planned for EVs by making sure the building has the electrical load capacity to add charging stations later.
鈥淲e were EV ready in that we had the load in those areas,鈥 said Sniffen, a former deputy director who was appointed to the top job by Gov. Josh Green in December. Sniffen said doing that, rather than installing chargers or charger-ready stalls, was 鈥渁 good decision.鈥
James Tokioka, a former state representative recently appointed as deputy director for the Transportation Department鈥檚 airports division, said that given the way technology advances, it was a better idea to install the most recent generation of chargers as needed rather than ahead of time.
Mikulina called such arguments 鈥渨eak sauce.鈥
He said it was 鈥渁 colossal blunder not to put in charging capacity when the facilities were being built. Now it will be far more expensive to retrofit.鈥
Kunishige said the department has ordered 32 charging stations that comply with a national program that provides federal money to states to deploy electric vehicle charging infrastructure. But none of those is planned for the Honolulu airport. The two initial planned sites are at Honolulu’s Aloha Tower and a park and ride lot in Kahului, Maui.
During a recent , DOT officials said their 2024 budget request included $95 million for capital improvements to the Honolulu airport, including improvements to the ticket lobby, TSA operations and a fire alarm system, as well as EV charging stations.
Legislation May Mandate Charging Stations At State Buildings
Now, state lawmakers are considering a bill that would require all new state buildings to be designed with electric vehicles in mind.
Introduced by Lowen, used by state workers so they can charge their cars while they鈥檙e at work. But she said the bill鈥檚 language means it would also apply to facilities like the airport rental car structure.
Specifically, the bill would “require that the design of new State facilities are electric vehicle charger ready鈥 and 鈥渆valuate the cost for retrofitting existing state parking facilities to make them electric vehicle charger-ready.鈥
The bill has the support of the Hawaii Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation Commission and the state’s energy chief, Mark Glick.
The bill is one of several measures that fall into a broad category of planning for a green energy future, including a time when electric cars overtake gas-powered cars in popularity. EVs now represent a small fraction of the as of January, according to the Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism.
But DBEDT鈥檚 data shows people are adopting EVs at an accelerating rate. In January, the number of passenger electric vehicles in the state was 22,806, an increase of 4,730 vehicles or 26% from the same month last year, and an increase of 557 vehicles or 2.5% from December.
Another bill would require solar conduit and electrical panel readiness for and electric vehicle readiness when an electrical panel and parking area are installed. Another would help for individuals installing EV charging systems.
Sen. Chris Lee, a longtime sustainable energy advocate who sponsored one of the EV bills, said it is generally far more expensive to retrofit a building to allow for an EV charger than to install one at the outset.
鈥淚t is significantly cheaper to do that when you鈥檙e building a brand new facility,鈥 he said.
In fact, he said, it can be as much as 鈥渘ine times (more) expensive to go back in and retrofit after the fact.鈥
Civil Beat’s coverage of climate change is supported by the Environmental Funders Group of the Hawaii Community Foundation, Marisla Fund of the Hawaii Community Foundation and the Frost Family Foundation.
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About the Author
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Stewart Yerton is the senior business writer for 天美视频. You can reach him at syerton@civilbeat.org.