Charging Forward: Unlocking the Grid for LA 2028 and Beyond | PART 1


Part 1: The Olympic Gridlock – Can LA Deliver on Clean Mobility?
Los Angeles is gearing up for the 2028 Olympics, a global stage to showcase athletic excellence and urban innovation. But behind the scenes, a critical challenge looms: can LA deliver on its ambition to power a fleet of 4,000 electric buses for a zero-emission Games? The stakes are high, and whispers are growing that the Olympics could be pulled from LA if the city can’t solve its electrification puzzle. The problem isn’t just ambition—it’s execution.
Recent reports, like those from the Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI), highlight the strain on LA’s grid and the logistical nightmare of scaling EV infrastructure in time. With LA Metro’s 12 planned charging depots still in early stages, and utilities like LADWP grappling with capacity constraints, the city faces a power problem that threatens its clean mobility goals. Add to this the political pressure—rumors suggest federal oversight could intervene if LA’s plans falter—and the urgency is palpable.
But this isn’t just a crisis; it’s an opportunity. A successful electrification strategy for the 2028 Olympics could redefine urban mobility, proving that large-scale, zero-emission transport is achievable even in sprawling metros like LA. To navigate this challenge, Critical Loop brought in Paul Stith, an industry veteran with decades of experience scaling technology, EV infrastructure and power delivery projects. What we uncovered isn’t just a power shortage—it’s a systems coordination challenge that demands bold, flexible solutions.
Stay tuned for Part 2, where we’ll unveil a phased playbook to electrify LA’s Olympic fleet, starting with a single bus and scaling to a city-wide solution by 2028.