I imagine I can dick around and find cheaper charging options, like 3 hours free, great, but I really don't like that concept. Three hours might be sufficient for how much we dirive, but it isn't very convenient for me, personally. I'd probably use it at least some of the time. I can drive there and walk home, or get a beer, or something.
The 25 cents fee is also "OK", but it's over in Atlantic Station, which is not really my favorite place to hang out.
And how many of these "free" stations are just doing that to get noticed, and then in a few months it's 48 cents?
Yeah, and bear in mind I'm not trying to convince you of anything, and most CERTAINLY not that an EV is the right choice for you. I personally wouldn't buy one if I didn't have the ability to charge at home. I don't want to spend my time worrying about where to charge. I'd rather just charge in my garage.
The reason I shared is that to an extent you make arguments about EVs from a place, quite frankly, of ignorance on the charging landscape. Which is completely understandable, because you have no incentive to learn all that you can about EV charging since you don't have nor are considering to buy an EV. If you assume that everyone is largely being forced into DC fast charging, the most expensive option, it gives you a skewed view of the economics. Likewise if you assume you can always find free charging, it gives an equally skewed view the other way. I thought it would offer a richer idea of the options that are out there.
And Plugshare isn't even complete. I don't know if your condo is on there; I would assume that if it's private and restricted access, it might not be. My work's parking structure isn't on there either. You need a key card as an employee to gain access, so it wouldn't make sense to show it on a public site. So there might even be a LOT more charging available than what is even shown there. Again making the total charging landscape richer but more complex.
But per your last question, I don't expect there to be a ton of free chargers forever, and I don't expect that those will suddenly become 48 cents. I believe free chargers are a way to get noticed--not that charging is available, but to get people to spend a couple hours somewhere that they might spend money. I.e. if you find a free charger but then buy an appetizer and two beers that you spent a lot more than eating lunch at home, is your charging really "free"? But overall once there are a LOT more EVs on the road, it won't make economic sense to offer free charging forever IMHO.
My belief is that as the charging infrastructure matures, charging costs will largely be driven by the market to be based upon electricity costs and then a reasonable profit margin driven down by competition. I see a scenario where the market largely pushes L2 charging to a very similar range of price wherever you are within one geographic area, and L3 DC Fast Charging to a significantly higher range of price. Much as we currently see at gas stations. The price isn't the same at every station, but they tend to be within a similar range in any geographical area.