
by Matthew Xiao at The Washington Free Beacon
Government Accountability Office slams the program’s lack of ‘performance goals with measurable targets and time frames for its activities’
The Biden administration’s $7.5 billion program to install electric-vehicle charging stations across the United States has delivered fewer than 400 charging ports since November 2021, according to a Tuesday report by the Government Accountability Office.
The EV charging initiative, part of former president Joe Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, has built just 384 charging ports at 68 stations in 16 states as of April 2025, Reuters reported after reviewing the GAO’s report. The figure amounts to less than 0.2 percent of the roughly 219,000 public EV charging ports operating nationwide.
“Wider adoption of [electric] vehicles may be slowed because there aren’t enough chargers available across the country,” the GAO wrote in its summary of the report, noting that the program’s oversight office “has not defined performance goals with measurable targets and time frames for its activities.”
Under Biden and former transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg, the Department of Transportation intended the program to build half a million charging stations by 2030.
The initiative was widely criticized, including by some Democrats. As of last year, only seven charging stations were operating, a situation that Sen. Jeff Merkley (D., Ore.) called “pathetic.”…