The one aspect of electric vehicle ownership which perhaps comes in for most criticism is the public charging network. Multiple charging providers that force drivers to carry a slew of payment cards or be members of numerous subscriptions, and reports of broken or non-functioning charging points show there’s obviously still some work to be done to aid, accelerate and sustain the electrified age. Of course, even with the government’s recent announcement to bring forward the sales ban of new IC-engined vehicles to 2030, there is still time to improve the charging situation. But, if 2020 has taught us anything, it’s that time waits for no-one and those intervening 10 years will sweep by with little fuss and without us realising. Some believe the time to solve the EV charging conundrum is now. Gridserve is one such company. Aiming to populate the country with 100 ‘electric forecourts’ over the next five years, Gridserve will open its first site near Braintree in Essex in November 2020. In the final stages of completion, the 2.5-acre site will have capacity to charge up to 30 electric vehicles at once, thanks to 24 high-power chargers and 6 Tesla superchargers. The 5 mega-watt (MW) AC grid connection will be able to deliver up to 20,000 miles of charge per hour, or 333 miles per minute. Cars, buses and HGVs will also all be supported. “It’s not run of the mill stuff, it’s quite heavyweight,” states Toddington Harper, Gridserve CEO. And he’s right.
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