Councillors demand right to charging stations in residential buildings
In future, the Federal Council must ensure that tenants and condominium owners have access to charging stations for electric vehicles in their residential properties. The Council of States has approved a corresponding motion by the National Council, despite concerns regarding the guarantee of ownership and the market principle.
On Wednesday, the Council of States adopted a motion by National Councillor Jürg Grossen by 24 votes to 18. The Federal Council should create binding regulations to ensure access to private charging stations in rented and owner-occupied apartments. The proponents argued that slow charging stations are a key lever for the mobility and energy transition.
Decarbonization needs infrastructure
Flavia Wasserfallen emphasized that a lack of charging infrastructure is one of the main reasons for stagnating sales figures for electric vehicles. “Cars need to be charged where they are,” she said. Thierry Burkart also pleaded for a state framework, “combustion engines would never have caught on without charging stations.”
Property rights versus climate target
The majority of the Council of States Committee for the Environment, Spatial Planning and Energy opposed a legal obligation. They warned against too much interference in the guarantee of property rights and private autonomy. Daniel Fässler argued that the market should determine where charging infrastructure is created.
Federal Council’s duty
The Federal Council had also spoken out against the motion. According to the government, the situation is unclear in the current tenancy and condominium law. Nevertheless, it must now draw up proposals to implement the request.
Past funding approaches failed
As part of the last revision of the CO₂ Act, the Federal Council wanted to provide up to CHF 30 million annually for charging infrastructure in apartment buildings and public parking lots. However, this measure failed at the time due to opposition from parliament.