This is a quick NRDC piece on plug-in hybrids (PHEVs).
http://www.nrdc.org/energy/plugin.pdf
Note that NRDC cautions "...if a PHEV's electrical charge comes from today's coal power, the plug-in would have higher global warming pollution compared with a non-pluggable hybrid..." and that "...in regions that are heavily dependent on dirty, coal-fired power plants there is a possibility for significant increases of soot and mercury."
NRDC recommends "careful assessment of power plant emissions should be done before a region decides to promote PHEVs." One reason is that plug-ins (and EVs generally) are widely expected to recharge at night but "because significant amounts of off-peak power could come from existing coal plants, this increases the importance of cleaning up these sources."
A word of further caution: If you read the fine print you'll see that the source of the GHG comparison data is an "EPRI-NRDC Joint Technical Report. Please note that EPRI, the Electric Power Research Institute, is an industry trade group whose members include 90% of U.S. electrical generation. In its press releases and PR (some via 'grass roots' shill groups) you'll find that EPRI always spins the GHG issue. If you listen carefully they always deflect the issues by immediately spinning to conventional local pollutant issues. If a paper co-authored by EPRI still has a cautious tone (buried in the text, not the headlines sent to reporters), then consider what a truly unbiased view would reveal...
Hopefully further research will show a "synergistic" between night-charging EVs/PHEVs and wind energy, but for the near and intermediate term it is likely that incremental load will be met by high GHG sources. A strict RPS in terms of percent of kWh could help the GHG case for EVs/PHEVs, but for now, be careful especially if you are a LADWP customer...
-tw