Auto Express

UK’S charging network mapped out

● Latest figures show new connection­s trail sales of plug-in cars

- John Mcilroy John_mcilroy@dennis.co.uk @johnmcilro­y

How does your area fare? Our map has the answers

THE UK added less than one new public charging point for every six new plug-in cars sold during 2017, Auto Express can reveal.

A total of 3,178 public connectors of varying speeds went live over the 12 months from January to December last year – but the latest Department for Transport figures show that more than 20,000 plug-in cars had been registered during the first nine months of the same period.

Data from charging infrastruc­ture website Zapmap ( zap-map.com) shows that the UK ended December with 14,093 charging points in 4,960 locations, compared with 10,986 and 4,042 at the start of 2017.

The data includes public charging points that are free to use, plus those run by card-based charging schemes such as Chargemast­er’s POLAR network. The numbers break down into three categories – slow chargers (usually those based on a three-pin socket connection), fast (7-22kw) and Rapid (50kw and higher). Tesla’s Supercharg­er network is excluded from the figures, because it’s restricted to owners of those vehicles.

Our map (right) also shows the number of cars eligible for a plug-in grant licensed in the respective areas. This is based on data from the DFT, accurate up to the end of September 2017, and includes pure-electric, plug-in hybrid and hydrogen fuelcell vehicles – but not standalone hybrids such as the Toyota Prius, or quadricycl­es like the Renault Twizy. It also excludes vans and motorcycle­s.

The DFT informatio­n shows that by the end of the third quarter of last year, there were nearly 113,000 cars eligible for the plug-in grant licensed in the UK – 100,145 in England, 5,995 in Scotland, 2,365 in Wales, 1,610 in Northern Ireland and 2,283 vehicles where the region was unknown.

Factor in the figures on quadricycl­es, motorcycle­s and vans, and there are 8.9 plug-in vehicles for every public charging point – close to the European Union’s preferred maximum ratio of 10 per public charging point.

The Scottish network appears to have benefited from government investment through Chargeplac­e Scotland; the country accounts for around six per cent of all licensed plug-in cars in the UK, but has 15 per cent of all fast chargers and a quarter of all rapid chargers.

The figures make grim reading for early adopters in Wales, however. Despite having around half as many plug-in vehicles registered as Scotland, it has just a tenth of its total of rapid chargers.

Chargemast­er operates the largest publicly accessible charging network in the UK, POLAR. The firm’s chief executive, David Martell, said that public charging is only part of the overall picture because most EV owners are happy to charge at home.

“There are well over 100,000 dedicated EV charging points in total when home and workplace units are taken into account,” Martell said. “By 2022, we expect there to be around 100,000 public charging points, with around 20 per cent of these being rapid chargers.”

Chargemast­er also believes that a ratio of 10 EVS per public charging point is manageable. The firm recently experience­d 1,000 users charging simultaneo­usly for the first time on the POLAR network – which comprises more than 5,500 connection points.

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