DOE’s Loan Programs Office (LPO) can potentially support EV charging infrastructure in the following two ways: Deployment and Manufacturing.
July 28, 2021Earlier today, the Department's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) announced $60 million for research and development projects aimed at reducing CO2 emissions from passenger cars and light- and heavy-duty trucks. This builds on actions announced by the Biden Administration in April to accelerate the deployment of electric vehicles (EVs) and chargers. DOE’s Loan Programs Office (LPO) can potentially support EV charging infrastructure in the following two ways: Deployment and Manufacturing.
First, through the Title 17 Innovative Energy Loan Guarantee Program, LPO can provide loan guarantees to support the domestic deployment of EV charging infrastructure, including associated hardware and software, in appropriate cases as distributed energy technology facilities, provided that such facilities otherwise satisfy all eligibility requirements. This program can help accelerate the commercial deployment of innovative EV charging technologies, which could potentially include among other technologies: DC fast charging, wireless charging, integrated energy storage, charging with demand response or bidirectional capabilities, or technology innovations that help overcome the unique challenges of charging in urban or rural settings.
Second, LPO can provide direct loans through the Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing (ATVM) program to support the manufacturing of EV charging infrastructure and related components in the United States for eligible advanced technology vehicles. In addition to manufacturing EV charging infrastructure, debt capital from ATVM can help the U.S. be at the forefront of manufacturing along the entire EV value chain, which could, in addition to the advanced technology vehicles themselves, potentially include among other things: critical materials, batteries and their components, light weighting materials, and efficiency-oriented vehicle components, provided that they constitute qualifying components.
For more information about how LPO can support electric vehicles and alternative fuel vehicles infrastructure in the United States, visit /LPO/EV. To engage with LPO staff for a pre-application consultation for your project, please email [email protected]. It would be helpful to provide a brief description of the project, preliminary fuel savings (for ATVM) or greenhouse gas avoided/reduction (for Title 17) estimates, estimated costs and timeline, and location (if known).
Jigar Shah
Former Director, Loan Programs Office
Jigar Shah served as Director of the Loan Programs Office (LPO) at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) from March 2021 to January 2025. He led and directed LPO’s loan authority to support deployment of innovative clean energy, advanced transportation, and Tribal energy projects in the United States. Prior, Shah was co-founder and President at Generate Capital, where he focused on helping entrepreneurs accelerate decarbonization solutions through the use of low-cost infrastructure-as-a service financing. Prior to Generate Capital, Shah founded SunEdison, a company that pioneered “pay as you save” solar financing. After SunEdison, Shah served as the founding CEO of the Carbon War Room, a global non-profit founded by Sir Richard Branson and Virgin Unite to help entrepreneurs address climate change.
Shah was also featured in TIME's list of the "100 Most Influential People" in 2024.
Originally from Illinois, Shah holds a B.S. from the University of Illinois-UC and an MBA from the University of Maryland College Park.