The Province

Group giving a jolt to EV sales

QUICK-CHARGING STOPS: Trio of automakers plan to build 400 stations in Europe in 2017

- TOM LAVELL

Volkswagen AG, BMW AG and Ford Motor Co. plan to set up a European network for speedy charging of electric-car batteries as the auto manufactur­ers seek to overcome customer resistance to the vehicles.

The partnershi­p, which will also include Mercedes-Benz parent Daimler AG, aims to establish “thousands” of stations along European highways by 2020, the automakers said last week.

With an initial target of about 400 sites, the group plans to start the rollout in 2017, deploying technology that will be “significan­tly faster” than current setups.

“A reliable, ultrafast charging infrastruc­ture is important for mass consumer adoption and has the potential to transform the possibilit­ies for electric driving,” Ford chief executive officer Mark Fields said in the statement.

The rare broad-based co-operation shows the strains on carmakers as they invest billions of dollars to develop battery-powered vehicles to comply with tighter environmen­tal regulation­s. Buyers have so far shown little interest in the models because of limited driving range, the time needed for recharging and the high price of vehicles. BMW sold fewer than 24,100 of its i3 electric city car last year out of the company’s total 2.2 million deliveries, while the Renault-Nissan automaking alliance has only handed over 350,000 electric vehicles to customers since 2010, versus a target of 1.5 million by the end of 2016.

Germany’s government agreed earlier this year to a 1-billion-euro ($1.06-billion) financing package to encourage electric-car purchases with about two-thirds of the figure slated for developing roadside charging stations. U.S. carmaker Tesla Motors Inc.’s network of 744 Supercharg­er-branded stations includes outlets across Europe.

 ?? — BMW CANADA FILES ?? To help spur sales of their electric i8, left, and i3, BMW has joined forces with other automakers to develop a network of fast-charging stations across Europe.
— BMW CANADA FILES To help spur sales of their electric i8, left, and i3, BMW has joined forces with other automakers to develop a network of fast-charging stations across Europe.
 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? An alliance including Volkswagen, BMW and Ford says new technology for charging electric vehicles will be ‘significan­tly faster.’
— GETTY IMAGES FILES An alliance including Volkswagen, BMW and Ford says new technology for charging electric vehicles will be ‘significan­tly faster.’

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