NY Awards $3 Million to Integrate Electric Vehicles Into the Grid

    NY Awards  Million to Integrate Electric Vehicles Into the Grid

    New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced a major push to accelerate the state’s transition to a cleaner, smarter transportation future. The state announced on July 8, 2025, that it awarded $3 million to three pioneering projects aimed at integrating electric vehicles (EVs) more effectively with the electric grid. In addition, the Governor unveiled a new $4 million funding opportunity to support technologies that solve critical data and operational challenges utilities face when managing EV charging. Together, these initiatives will enhance grid flexibility, shift charging patterns to better match energy demand, and ultimately lower costs for consumers.

    NY Awards  Million to Integrate Electric Vehicles Into the Grid
    (Image: BillPierce.net, generated by Google Gemini)

    The $3 million in awards come from the Vehicle Grid Integration Program, administered by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA). This program supports scalable projects that push the boundaries of EV charging infrastructure through new technologies, demonstrations, or innovative business models. Projects focus on cutting-edge solutions such as bi-directional charging, energy storage, on-site renewable generation, and advanced managed charging.

    Doreen M. Harris, President and CEO of NYSERDA, emphasized the significance of this investment:

    “Investing in vehicle-to-grid integration is a game changer for utilities and consumers when it comes to balancing demand on the electric grid. These awarded companies have put forward innovative solutions to improve the way we achieve that balance. By advancing technologies that shift when EV charging happens, we open the door to future cost reductions, more renewable energy, increased grid flexibility, and fewer infrastructure upgrades,” said Harris.

    Awarded Projects

    • Voltpost: Awarded $775,000 to advance lamppost-based EV charging across New York City, the Capital Region, and Hudson Valley. The project focuses on achieving UL certification, retrofitting infrastructure, and deploying at least ten additional Level 2 chargers to expand access.
    • The Mobility House: Received $867,000 to demonstrate flexible interconnection strategies for electric school bus fleets. The project will pilot depot charging in Staten Island and another location in New York, showcasing how to decouple charger installation timelines from broader grid infrastructure upgrades.
    • Weave Grid, Inc.: Granted nearly $1 million to develop distribution-optimized managed charging in the Orange and Rockland Utilities service area. By leveraging software and topology data, the project will control when EV charging happens to balance energy loads more effectively.

    New Funding for Managed EV Charging Technologies

    In addition to the awarded projects, Governor Hochul announced $4 million in new funding through NYSERDA’s Electric Vehicle Managed Charging program. This competitive solicitation seeks proposals from researchers, developers, and consultants to create or demonstrate technologies addressing the complex data and operational hurdles utilities face as EV adoption rises.

    The focus includes behind-the-meter solutions, bi-directional data transfer, and utility control over charging, all aimed at easing grid demand and informing future utility rate structures and programs. This solicitation was developed in collaboration with Avangrid, parent company of Rochester Gas & Electric (RG&E) and New York State Electric & Gas (NYSEG).

    Proposals for this funding opportunity are due by September 16, 2025, at 3:00 p.m. ET. For more details and application information, visit NYSERDA’s website.

    With these strategic investments, forward-thinking New York continues to lead the nation in clean transportation innovation—paving the way for a more resilient grid and a more sustainable future for all New Yorkers.

    EVinfo.net’s Take

    EVinfo.net is encouraged to see New York take such bold steps to support its EV adoption. We hope to see many other states follow. Although EVs and EV charging will succeed without state subsidies, adoption would take longer to spread without them, resulting in more smog for residents, deeper effects of global human-caused climate change, and higher costs for drivers. This is a wise choice for New York. Brooklyn, NY is home to it’s electric, an innovative curbside EV charging company.

    Lynkwell, the Northeast’s Leading EV Charging Company

    Lynkwell is an innovative U.S.-based energy infrastructure and EV charging company dedicated to simplifying electric mobility across the value chain. Headquartered in Albany, NY, and backed by Warren Equity Partners, Lynkwell offers curated hardware solutions—including its flagship XLynk™ Level 2 charger with a groundbreaking lifetime warranty and fast-swap faceplate—alongside comprehensive software, services, and procurement support.

    Lynkwell’s “X‑Change” platform connects businesses, fleets, utilities, and drivers, enabling modular deployment of Level 2 and DC fast chargers, seamless interoperability via OCPP 2.0 and ISO 15118, and dynamic load management backed by 24/7 U.S. support. With operations across the U.S., Canada, and Guam, Lynkwell is rapidly scaling EV charging infrastructure while maintaining Build America and Buy America compliance to support domestic growth.

    Contact Lynkwell today, highly recommended by EVinfo.net.