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Driving 3,250 kilometres for only $30, in an electric vehicle

Conservation biologist Brett Favarodecided to plan a family vacation around a work trip, using his family's electric vehicle to travel between St. John's and Quebec City.

Conservation biologist Brett Favaro says technology is there, but support infrastructure isn't

Dr. Brett Favaro is a research scientist at Memorial University's Fisheries and Marine Institute. (Ted Blades/CBC)

Want to drive to Quebec City from St. John's, and drop into Prince Edward Island along the wayfor only $30?

Conservation biologist Brett Favaro did it all in hiselectric vehicle.

Favarodecided to plan a family vacation around a work tripto Frederictonto take part in a conferencefor theCanadian Society for Ecology andEvolution.

After boarding the Marine Atlantic ferry to get offNewfoundland,Favaro said, it was smooth sailing in terms of ease of use for driving an electric vehicle.

"We chose Argentia because there's very little charging infrastructure on the island of Newfoundland," Favaro told CBC Radio's On The Go.

"Once we got to Nova Scotia, there wasn't muchplanning necessary at all, because every 100 kilometres down the road or so there's a fast charging station that you can use to plug in on the highway."

Favaro drove his family's Tesla Model S to Quebec City and back to St. John's, with some stops in between, and said it only cost him $30. (Tesla)

According to Favaro, his carcan get up to 400 kilometres on a single charge.

Charging times then vary depending on which kind ofcharging stations a driver encounters on the road.

The trip

In total, Favarosaid he and his family drove 3,250 kilometres, whichtook 700 kilowatt-hoursof power.

To put that into perspective, Favarosaid,paying for 700 kilowatt-hours of power in Newfoundland and Labrador would cost$77.

With free charging at Tesla stations for his vehicle, and Airbnb accomodations that had EV charging stations, Favaro said he only ended up spending $30.

Favarosaidthe equivalent cost in a typical, gas-powered sedan would bebetween $300 and $400for the same trip.

A EV charger plugged into a white car.
Favaro said choosing the ferry in Argentia as opposed to Port aux Basques was out of necessity due to the lack of electric vehicle infrastructue across Newfoundland. (Toby Talbot/Associated Press)

"I think about where I'm putting my money as well. Climate change is a real serious problem. I would rather give my money to the electricity utilities, and I'd rather give my money to the charge station companies than I would to the gas stations," he said.

"Nothing againstthe people who work at gas stations, but theindustry as a whole needs to shift to renewable energy so that we can actuallydecarbonize our economy."

Necessary infrastructure

Favaro said there may be anegative preconception about electric vehicle technology, and some people who may believe the vehicleshave limited range and charging speeds.

But Favaro said the vehicle technology is quite advanced what's missing is the infrastructure to support them.

"The cars are fine. You have to remember we've spent 100 years and however many billions of dollars of subsidies to get the infrastructure to where it is where you can find a gas station every few hundred kilometres down the road," he said.

"We've spent so much money fighting wars to go get oil, or whether we're building gas stations and not charging for the pollution or not charging when an oil rig spills oil into the ocean. We don't bill for that. This is all what subsidizes that gas car network."

Favaro added that in five years' time, being an owner of an EV could be completely different.

"When we think about the limitations, what we're seeing is a hundred years of structure that's put all this stuff in place for gas cars, and only a handful of years for electric vehicles."

Favaro said EV owners use a website called Plug Share to figure out where charging stations are located, and plan their road trips accordingly.

"The message here is that, if you're a hotel or you're a small business owner, it's in your interest to put a charge station on your place," Favaro said.

"They only cost between $800 and $1,000 for the level two stations and all us EV road trippers will find your hotel and we will stay at your hotel because we want to be able to charge overnight."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from On The Go