Popularity of incentives for E-bikes, electric vehicles leads to cut in programs
By Rob Smith / ecoRI News staff
Citing a shortage of program funds, state officials recently announced they are cutting the incentives available to residents looking to buy electric bicycles or vehicles.
Effective Aug. 1, the state Office of Energy Resources (OER) cut the amount of rebates available to new and used electric car purchases by $500.
Prior to the program’s pause on
July 11, new electric cars were eligible for up to $2,500 in rebates from the
state, and used cars were eligible for up to $1,500 in rebate money.
State officials also gave a haircut to Rhode Island’s e-bike rebate program. Named in honor of the late Associated Press reporter Erika Niedowski, the program at launch provided $400 in rebates for e-bike purchases, or 30% of the total price of the bicycle, whichever was cheaper. Low-income residents were eligible for a $1,000 rebate, or 75% of the purchase price, whichever was lower.
Starting this month, the standard rebate for e-bikes was
lowered to $350, with the low-income rebate getting cut to $750 per purchase.
“These changes were implemented on Aug. 1 to help sustain
the long-term viability of the rebate programs and continue supporting
individuals in their transition to electric vehicles and e-bikes,” said Natalie
Bishop, a communications coordinator for OER.
Other changes to the programs include removing Medicare
from the list of government programs that automatically qualified residents for
the low-income rebates. Bishop said the change was made because having Medicare
on the list qualified anyone over 65 for the low-income incentive, regardless
of their actual income level.
“To ensure that the resources are directed to those who
genuinely fall into the low-income bracket, we decided to remove Medicare from
the list of qualifying programs,” Bishop said.
The electric car program widened its list of car
dealerships eligible to offer the rebate to a number of dealerships in
Massachusetts. State officials also added qualifying language to the e-bike
program, stipulating that a company selling e-bikes online must have a physical
brick-and-mortar location in Rhode Island to qualify for the state incentives.
The changes come after OER officials announced a pause in the rebate programs last month, citing dwindling funds for the rebates themselves. Since launching the EV rebate program more than a year ago, state officials have paid out $1.68 million in rebates.
The program was funded with a
one-time $1.25 million allocation from lawmakers in last year’s state budget.
According to an OER dashboard, the
program has only $347,500 left after processing the remaining July
applications.
The e-bike program has been just as popular. Since its
launch in October 2022, the program has distributed $402,563 in
income-qualified rebates and $140,912 of standard e-bike incentives. After
July, there is only $40,000 left for income-qualified rebates, and $35,000 left
for standard ones.
Help may be on the way. Earlier this year the state
Executive Climate Change Coordinating Council authorized an additional $400,000
for the EV and e-bike rebate programs, with the majority of funding expected to
be approved at the council’s next meeting in September.