Today, in many jurisdictions, vehicle and vehicle usage is taxed for the purpose of paying for infrastructure like roads and bridges, etc. Often, taxes on vehicles consist of a fixed component related to vehicle ownership like registration tax, yearly license plate tax and mandatory stickers. There is also typically a variable tax component, such as road tolls and taxes on fuel. The latter two are more proportional to the vehicle usage and the miles the vehicle has been driving. The more ones drives, the more roads are used and the more the driver contributes to road infrastructure building and maintenance. This tax collection scheme is simple, fraud insensitive and provides an incentive to design better fuel or energy efficient vehicles.
Also, it is common to discriminate between types of usage for fuel by using different tax rates for different types of use. For example, tax on diesel fuel used in vehicles is not the same as tax on heating fuel. In order to reduce tax avoidance, some countries have added a color to the heating fuel to avoid people using heating fuel in their vehicles.
According to one aspect of the present invention, an example of a power consumption metering device for a vehicle configured to utilize electrical energy from an external source includes a power metering circuit configured to be electrically coupled to a main power cable of a vehicle between an external power charging port of the electrical vehicle and an energy store of the vehicle and configured to measure voltage and current on the main power cable from the external source. The system also includes a communications module configured for data communication. And a controller is coupled to the power metering circuit and the communication module, the controller including a processor and a memory, with machine executable instructions stored in the memory that, when executed by the processor, cause the controller to obtain a measurement of the voltage and current integrated over time to determine data for an amount of energy consumed during power charging, store the data for the amount of energy consumed in the memory, using the communications module, establish a communication link with a tax assessment application executing on a client device, and responsive to establishing the communication link with the tax assessment application, transfer the data for the amount of energy consumed to the tax assessment application.
According to another aspect of the present invention, an example of a computer-implemented method for metering power consumption for a vehicle configured to utilize electrical energy from an external source calls for measuring voltage and current between an external power charging port of an electrical vehicle and an energy store of the vehicle, integrating the measured voltage and current over time to determine data for an amount of energy consumed during power charging, and storing the data for the amount of energy consumed. The method also calls for establishing a communication link with a tax assessment application and, responsive to establishing the communication link with the tax assessment application, transferring the data for the amount of energy consumed to the tax assessment application.
Various embodiments in accordance with the present disclosure will be described with reference to the drawings, in which:
Note that the same or similar numbers are used throughout the disclosure and figures to reference like components and features.
The subject matter of embodiments of the present invention is described here with specificity to meet statutory requirements, but this description is not necessarily intended to limit the scope of the claims. The claimed subject matter may be embodied in other ways, may include different elements or steps, and may be used in conjunction with other existing or future technologies. This description should not be interpreted as implying any particular order or arrangement among or between various steps or elements except when the order of individual steps or arrangement of elements is explicitly described.
When it comes the electric vehicles or plug in hybrid vehicles, today, the user is practically not taxed in a variable way as the driver can charge his vehicle at home and the user pays taxes that are the same as the ones applied for use in the home. Those taxes are typically low compared to the taxes levied on gasoline. One also can generate his energy from solar panels for example. In that case there is no tax levied at all.
Many countries today accept reduced taxing of electric vehicles as this gives an incentive to increase the proportion of electric vehicles on their roads. They are more energy efficient and hence good to reduce overall CO2 pollution.
However, as the electric vehicle replaces the existing gasoline vehicle base, the taxing bodies will receive significantly less tax revenue. Sooner or later, taxing bodies will seek alternative ways to increase their tax revenues to compensate for this effect.
A simple way to avoid tax revenue erosion caused by a diminishing gasoline vehicle base can be implemented by applying a higher fixed annual fee for electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids. Some states actually today apply extra registration fees, reduce tax credits and ponder on applying annual fees. However, fixed taxes do not reflect infrastructure usage and it would be preferable if a variable tax scheme could be applied to electric vehicles that is similar to that applied to gasoline powered vehicles.
One proposed approach is the Oregon Mileage Fee Concept as described in “Oregon's Mileage Fee Concept and Road User Fee Pilot Program, Final Report”, November 2007, James M. Whitty. This approach tries to introduce a variable tax component to take into account the miles driven and apply a rate depending on zones. Payment is then initiated at a pump or charge station, sometimes called a Point of Sale (POS). There are several potential issues with this system: It eliminates an important incentive to drive energy efficient vehicles as one only looks at mileage. The system is costly and difficult to retrofit, as a device has to connect to the odometer inside the vehicle. Moreover, hardware needs to be installed at all POS stations to receive and report vehicle usage information. Furthermore, the payment at a fuel pump POS is only relevant for gasoline powered vehicles. Reliance on charging station POS implementation may be ineffective because electric vehicles can be charged at home or other private places such that the vehicle may not need to visit a POS charging station. Also, there may be difficulty in connecting to a tax processing system at the POS, which may occur frequently with wireless systems, such as radio frequency (RF) systems. Therefore, it potentially lacks robustness and may be burdensome for users. Also, such a system may be vulnerable to fraud if odometers can sometimes be compromised.
United States Patent Publication no. 2009/0177580 describes another method of collecting tax for electric vehicles at a charging station POS. After communicating to a tax server, the taxes can be applied directly together with the costs of the charging electricity. This approach is the gasoline pump equivalent of an electricity charging station. This approach also suffers from the shortcoming that it may be bypassed by an electric vehicle owner with a garage at home or any other place that has an electrical outlet the permits the vehicle owner to charge the vehicle practically tax free or at tax rates that do not reflect usage of public infrastructure.
One object of the present approach is to collect vehicle usage tax for vehicles that use electricity regardless of the electricity source used for charging. In one example in accordance with certain aspects of the present approach, a device is installed in a vehicle and no infrastructure changes at the POS may be necessary.
A power meter module attached to the electric vehicle plug meters and stores in memory the electrical energy charged. As the charging locations may be in different tax zones (countries, states, regions etc.), the zone of the charging location may also be stored in some examples. In one example, the user can establish, using his own computer or mobile phone on which a user interface and tax assessment application is installed, an internet connection to the tax body controlled/owned server (tax server) 400. The information containing the tax zone, electrical energy charged together with a unique vehicle identification number (VIN) can now be communicated, preferably using encryption. The taxing body can then invoice the vehicle owner and can use the vehicle owner information on record for the fixed tax component or vehicle registration.
In some examples, to address privacy concerns, it is not necessary to communicate precise date stamps and precise location information of the charging point to the tax server. However, this information can be useful to the vehicle owner. In some examples, the system is configured to make that information available using the user interface tax assessment application.
It could well be that some drivers do not want to communicate anything to a tax server or retrofit the vehicle with the system. In that case the taxing body can just apply a fixed tax rate. Ideally this should then be high enough to incite the vehicle owner to connect to the tax server.
When crossing regions or countries that apply different tax rates, as the tax server has information about the different regions the vehicle was in when charging took place, it can transfer the tax collected from the vehicle owner to these regions. This can be done anonymously, to avoid privacy concerns.
In this example, which utilizes an on-board computer system 200 also located in the vehicle, the communication module 106 of consumption device 100 establishes a communication link 102 with the on-board communication system 200, which is running a tax assessment application for communicating with the communications module of vehicle electrical consumption device 100. The on-board computer system 200 also includes a communications module that provides a communication link 202 to Wide Area Network WAN (300), which may be the Internet. Communication link 202 may be wireless or wired, such as links using Ethernet, Wi-Fi or Mobile Data Communication standards for example. Communication link 102 to the on-board computer system 200 may be wired or wireless, such as links using Near Field Communication (NFC), Bluetooth or Wi-Fi standards for example.
The tax assessment application 210 running upon on-board computer system 200 is configured to obtain electrical consumption information from electrical consumption device 100, such as the amount of electrical power used in charging, the date when charging was performed, and the location of the vehicle when charging was performed. The tax assessment application 210 then communicates with tax server 400 via WAN 300 to transfer the electrical consumption information along with identifying data, such as Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) and vehicle owner account information, for processing a variable tax assessment for the vehicle.
Note that this approach may, in some examples, be implemented relatively simply and at low cost by installing the electrical consumption device 100, which may be a relatively low cost device, in a vehicle to measure the charged energy and installing the tax assessment application in a personal computer, phone or other device. The module may use a VIN number or other unique identifier associated with the vehicle, which may be stored in memory on the device 100 and transferred to the tax assessment application. It may also use the geo-location of the charging point to determine the tax region. Some examples may utilize a user initiated internet connection or can allow for an automated connection to the tax server. Various implementations of the consumption module may be designed for relatively simple retrofitting of existing vehicles or built into the vehicle by the original manufacturer. It should be noted that many of the hardware components, such as an on-board computer, described herein are available in a modern car today, so the car manufacturer only has to add the power metering hardware and adapt software to establish the transfer of data to the tax server. It may then be envisioned that the car can have its own automatic connection at periodic intervals to the tax server.
The power metering circuit 120 monitors the voltage and current on the main power cable in order to determine energy consumption. In this example, the power metering circuit 120 operates by integrating the observed voltage and current over time according to the following equation:
Energy consumption=∫t=Start−Charge timet=Stop−Charge timeVin(t)*In(t)*dt
A controller 130 receives and stores the power consumption readings from the power metering circuit 120 in memory 132 along with, in this example, location data received from a GPS receiver 150. The controller 130 then attempts to use a communication module 140 to communicate with a tax assessment application via communication link 102 as previously discussed. The controller 130 may also store time data and VIN in memory 132 along with the consumption data.
Note that, in some implementations, a vehicle battery can be used as a power source, such as a power source for a house. In such implementations, the vehicle battery may discharge and the energy transfer from the vehicle battery may be monitored and subtracted from the measured power consumption communicated to the tax assessment application.
At 620, controller 130 uses communication circuit 150 to establish a connection to communicate with tax assessment application 500. For example, when the vehicle is at the user's home, controller 130 may establish a WiFi link on the user's home network to a personal computer running tax assessment application 500. If a connection is established with tax assessment application 500, then, at 624, the consumption data stored in memory 132 is transferred to the application 500.
In some examples, the controller 130 in the consumption device 100 is coded to perform fraud detection. For example, if the consumption module is powered from the vehicle battery, then it may be possible to disconnect or otherwise deprive the module of power. Fraud or failure checks can detect such tampering or module failure. For example, the controller may operate to detect that voltage is present, but no current for a prolonged period or that current is present, but no voltage is present.
In another example, the controller may be coded to detect whether the user has disconnected the consumption device 100 from the battery to charge the battery and avoid power metering and then reconnected the module. The controller may use a real time clock supplied by the GPS module to periodically check whether a supply voltage from the battery is present and store the supply voltage present indicator in memory along with a time stamp. If the battery is disconnected from the consumption module, then the controller will detect the time period during which the battery was disconnected.
The controller may also be coded to perform diagnostics. If no voltage and no current is present for a prolonged time, the module can diagnose itself to detect if wires are cut by applying a voltage at different times and measuring the current to detect if there is a load. A fault diagnosis word may be stored in memory to indicate the fault status.
The fault and fraud detection data stored in memory 132 may be reported to the tax server 400 when a connection is re-established. The tax authority can then be notified by tax processing server 400 to take action, such as to call in the car for inspection and/or start to charge the fixed rate tax. It also can reset the fault detection, off line time and diagnosis code words after the user or verification center indicates that the module is fixed.
If, at 654, a connection is detected, then, at 656, tax assessment application 500 obtains the consumption data stored in the memory of consumption device 100. At 660, tax assessment application 500, using the Internet connection of its host device, establishes a secure connection with tax processing server 400. At 662, the application transfers the consumption data obtained from the consumption device 100 to the tax processing server so that variable usage tax may be assessed based on the measured energy consumption. The data obtained from the consumption device 100 and transferred to tax assessment server 400 may include the fraud and fault data discussed above.
Another use case for the system and method described herein is for car rental or loan. For example, car rental agencies or similar businesses, where the user of the car may be contractually required to pay the tax on energy consumption, the system may make available the electricity usage between a start and stop date/time. The rental company can then add the usage tax to the user bill. In one approach, a special user application for rental agencies is provided, so that after returning the car, the connection may be made with the tax server to determine the payable amount using the interface application. Then the car rental agency can add the tax amount to the final customer invoice.
Another use case involves sale of a vehicle. On the date of sale or registration, the tax processing application establishes communication with the consumption module in the vehicle to obtain the last usage reading. Communication is also established from the tax processing application to the tax server in order to transmit the last usage reading for the seller of the vehicle
One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that other power metering approaches may be utilized without departing from the teaching of the present approach.
In accordance with at least one embodiment of the invention, the system, apparatus, methods, processes and/or operations for providing access to a proximate device from a mobile device may be wholly or partially implemented in the form of a set of instructions executed by one or more programmed computer processors, such as a central processing unit (CPU) or microprocessor. Such processors may be incorporated in an apparatus, server, client or other computing device operated by, or in communication with, other components of the system.
As an example,
It should be understood that the present invention as described above can be implemented in the form of control logic using computer software in a modular or integrated manner. Based on the disclosure and teachings provided herein, a person of ordinary skill in the art will know and appreciate other ways and/or methods to implement the present invention using hardware and a combination of hardware and software.
Any of the software components, processes or functions described in this application may be implemented as software code to be executed by a processor using any suitable computer language such as, for example, Java, C++ or Perl or using, for example, conventional or object-oriented techniques. The software code may be stored as a series of instructions, or commands on a computer readable medium, such as a random access memory (RAM), a read only memory (ROM), a magnetic medium such as a hard-drive or a floppy disk, or an optical medium such as a CD-ROM. Any such computer readable medium may reside on or within a single computational apparatus, and may be present on or within different computational apparatuses within a system or network.
All references, including publications, patent applications, and patents, cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each reference were individually and specifically indicated to be incorporated by reference and/or were set forth in its entirety herein.
The use of the terms “a” and “an” and “the” and similar referents in the specification and in the following claims are to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural, unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The terms “having,” “including,” “containing” and similar referents in the specification and in the following claims are to be construed as open-ended terms (e.g., meaning “including, but not limited to,”) unless otherwise noted. Recitation of ranges of values herein are merely indented to serve as a shorthand method of referring individually to each separate value inclusively falling within the range, unless otherwise indicated herein, and each separate value is incorporated into the specification as if it were individually recited herein. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The use of any and all examples, or exemplary language (e.g., “such as”) provided herein, is intended merely to better illuminate embodiments of the invention and does not pose a limitation to the scope of the invention unless otherwise claimed. No language in the specification should be construed as indicating any non-claimed element as essential to each embodiment of the present invention.
Different arrangements of the components depicted in the drawings or described above, as well as components and steps not shown or described are possible. Similarly, some features and subcombinations are useful and may be employed without reference to other features and subcombinations. Embodiments of the invention have been described for illustrative and not restrictive purposes, and alternative embodiments will become apparent to readers of this patent. Accordingly, the present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above or depicted in the drawings, and various embodiments and modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention.
The disclosure presented herein also includes the subject matter set forth in the following clauses.
Clause 1: A power consumption metering device for a vehicle configured to utilize electrical energy from an external source, the system comprising: a power metering circuit configured to be electrically coupled to a main power cable of a vehicle between an external power charging port of the electrical vehicle and an energy store of the vehicle and configured to measure voltage and current on the main power cable from the external source; a communications module configured for data communication; a controller coupled to the power metering circuit and the communication module, the controller including a processor and a memory, the memory having stored therein machine executable instructions that, when executed by the processor, cause the controller to: obtain a measurement of the voltage and current from the power metering circuit integrated over time to determine data for an amount of energy consumed during power charging, store the data for the amount of energy consumed in the memory, using the communications module, establish a communication link with a tax assessment application executing on a client device, and responsive to establishing the communication link with the tax assessment application, transfer the data for the amount of energy consumed to the tax assessment application.
Clause 2: The power consumption metering device of clause 1, the memory having further stored therein machine executable instructions that, when executed by the processor, cause the controller to: periodically monitor the power metering circuit to detect voltage and current on the main power cable, if no voltage and current is detected on the main power cable, store data in memory indicating that no voltage and current was detected with an associated time stamp indicating when no voltage and current was detected, and responsive to establishing the communication link with the tax assessment application, transfer the data indicating no voltage and current was detected and the associated time stamp to the tax assessment application.
Clause 3: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, the memory having further stored therein machine executable instructions that, when executed by the processor, cause the controller to: responsive to detecting that no voltage and current is detected on the main power cable, determining a presence of a load on the main power cable by causing the power metering circuit to apply a voltage to the main power cable and measure a resulting current on the main power cable, if no load is detected on the main power cable, store data in memory indicating that no load was detected with an associated time stamp indicating when no load was detected, and responsive to establishing the communication link with the tax assessment application, transfer the data indicating no load was detected and the associated time stamp to the tax assessment application.
Clause 4: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, the system further including a global positioning system module and the memory having further stored therein machine executable instructions that, when executed by the processor, cause the controller to: when power charging is detected, obtain geolocation data from the global positioning system module, store the geolocation data with the data for the amount of energy consumed in the memory, responsive to establishing the communication link with the tax assessment application, transfer the geolocation data along with the data for the amount of energy consumed to the tax assessment application.
Clause 5: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, the system further including the client device, the client device having a processor, a memory, and a communication module, the client device memory having stored therein machine executable instructions for the tax assessment application that, when executed by the client device processor, cause the client device processor to: using the client device communications module, establish the communication link to the controller coupled to the power metering circuit; receive from the controller coupled to the power metering circuit the data for the amount of energy consumed; using the client device communications module, establish a communication link to a tax processing server; and transfer the data for the amount of energy consumed to the tax processing server.
Clause 6: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, where the instructions stored in the client device memory that cause the client device processor to establish the communication link to the tax processing server include instructions that cause the communication link to the tax processing server to be secure.
Clause 7: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, where the instructions stored in the client device memory include instructions that cause the client device processor to transfer a Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) to the tax processing server.
Clause 8: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, where the controller coupled to the power metering circuit and the client device processor are combined in a single device.
Clause 9: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, where the power metering circuit is installed in a vehicle and a Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) is stored in the memory of the controller coupled to the power metering circuit and the VIN is transferred to the tax assessment application with the data for the amount of energy consumed.
Clause 10: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, where the power metering circuit is configured to measure charged electrical energy.
Clause 11: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, where the power metering circuit is configured to measure charged electrical energy by integrating the voltage on the main power cable over time and multiplying the integrated voltage by the current.
Clause 12: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, where the power metering circuit is configured to measure polyphase power by summing the measured energy for each phase of the polyphase power.
Clause 13: The power consumption metering device of any of the above clauses, the memory having stored therein machine executable instructions that, when executed by the processor, cause the controller to: obtain a measurement of the voltage and current integrated over time to determine data for an amount of energy discharged during power discharging, store the data for the amount of energy discharged in the memory, and subtract the amount of energy discharged from the amount of energy consumed.
Clause 14: A computer-implemented method for metering power consumption for a vehicle configured to utilize electrical energy from an external source, the method comprising: measuring voltage and current between an external power charging port of an electrical vehicle and an energy store of the vehicle; integrating the measured voltage and current over time to determine data for an amount of energy consumed during power charging; storing the data for the amount of energy consumed; establishing a communication link with a tax assessment application; and responsive to establishing the communication link with the tax assessment application, transferring the data for the amount of energy consumed to the tax assessment application.
Clause 15: The computer-implemented method for metering power consumption of clause 14, the method including: periodically monitoring the power metering circuit to detect voltage and current between the external power charging port and the energy store of the vehicle; if no voltage and current is detected, storing data in memory indicating that no voltage and current was detected with an associated time stamp indicating when no voltage and current was detected; and transferring the data indicating no voltage and current was detected and the associated time stamp to the tax assessment application.
Clause 16: The computer-implemented method for metering power consumption of any of the above clauses, the method including: responsive to detecting that no voltage and current is detected on the main power cable, determining a presence of a load between the external power charging port and the energy store of the vehicle; if no load is detected, storing data in memory indicating that no load was detected with an associated time stamp indicating when no load was detected; and transferring the data indicating no load was detected and the associated time stamp to the tax assessment application.
Clause 17: The computer-implemented method for metering power consumption of any of the above clauses, the method including: obtaining geolocation data when power charging is detected; storing the geolocation data with the data for the amount of energy consumed in the memory; and transferring the geolocation data along with the data for the amount of energy consumed to the tax assessment application.
Clause 18: The computer-implemented method for metering power consumption of any of the above clauses, the method including: receiving the data for the amount of energy consumed in the tax assessment application; establishing a communication link between the tax assessment application and a tax processing server; and transferring the data for the amount of energy consumed from the tax assessment application to the tax processing server.
Clause 19: The computer-implemented method for metering power consumption of any of the above clauses, the method including securely transferring a Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) to the tax processing server.
Clause 20: The computer-implemented method for metering power consumption of any of the above clauses, where the measuring of voltage and current between an external power charging port of an electrical vehicle and an energy store of the vehicle includes at least one of: measuring charged electrical energy by integrating the voltage over time and multiplying the integrated voltage by the current; and measuring polyphase power by summing the measured energy for each phase of the polyphase power.
Clause 21: The computer-implemented method for metering power consumption of any of the above clauses, the method including: obtaining a measurement of the voltage and current integrated over time to determine data for an amount of energy discharged during power discharging, storing the data for the amount of energy discharged in the memory, and subtracting the amount of energy discharged from the amount of energy consumed.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Appl. No. 62/456,750 for “System and Method for Metering Vehicle Electricity Consumption for Variable Tax Collection” filed Feb. 9, 2017, herein incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62456750 | Feb 2017 | US |