New Zealand Truck & Driver

Huge charging investment required

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RAPIDLY INCREASING SALES OF ELECTRICAL­LY rechargeab­le vehicles (Battery Electric and Plug-in Hybrid) across Europe requires a massive investment boost in charging infrastruc­ture to keep pace.

Supported by new research, the European Automobile Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n (ACEA) is calling on all EU member states to urgently stepup investment­s in infrastruc­ture for electrical­ly-chargeable cars, vans, trucks and buses.

The auto industry is already placing hundreds of models of low- and zero-emission vehicles on the market, but has serious concerns about the slow deployment of the infrastruc­ture needed to charge these vehicles.

The research also identifies a need for greatly increased investment in fleet hub, highway and overnight charging facilities for heavy trucks.

Sales of electrical­ly-chargeable cars increased 10-fold in the EU over the past five years, reaching 1.7m units last year (or 18% of the total market). The number of public chargers in the EU grew by 2.5 times over the same period.

According to new cross-industry research based on analysis by Mckinsey, up to 6.8m public charging points would be required across the EU by 2030 to reach the proposed 55% CO2 reduction for passenger cars.

This figure is almost twice that put forward by the European Commission in its Alternativ­e Fuels Infrastruc­ture Regulation (AFIR) proposal, which is now under negotiatio­n in the European Parliament and Council.

This means that up to 14,000 public charging points for all vehicle segments would need to be installed Eu-wide every week – compared to under 2,000 per week currently.

“The transition to zero is a long-term race,” says ACEA President and CEO of BMW Group, Oliver Zipse.

“The key challenge now is to convince all member states to pick up the pace in deploying the required infrastruc­ture. We absolutely need an ambitious conclusion of the AFIR proposal, both in terms of its timing and the targets it sets for each EU country.”

Although sizeable investment­s will be required at the outset, these represent just a fraction of the total investment­s into comparable infrastruc­ture projects – and would bring huge environmen­tal benefits.

For example, the new research paper estimates the annual costs for public charging infrastruc­ture at €8bn (NZ$12.6 billion) – around 16% of investment into 5G and high-speed internet networks.

The report says the locations, space and power output levels needed for heavy-duty commercial vehicle infrastruc­ture are substantia­lly different to those for passenger cars.

According to the research paper, trucks will require 279,000 charging points by 2030, of which 84% will be in fleet hubs. The remaining charging points will be predominan­tly public, fast along-highway (36,000) and public overnight charging points (9,000).

T&D

 ?? ?? The sales growth of electric vehicles is outstrippi­ng the pace of charging infrastruc­ture investment in Europe.
The sales growth of electric vehicles is outstrippi­ng the pace of charging infrastruc­ture investment in Europe.

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