A new report by the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (ACEA) shows that despite strong growth, the available charging infrastructure for electric vehicles in the EU still falls far below what is needed.
ACEA recently published the second edition of Making the Transition to Zero-Emission Mobility, an annual study which tracks progress on the availability of the infrastructure and incentives which are necessary to foster market uptake of alternatively-powered vehicles, especially electric vehicles. Available to download here
In order to drive the shift to zero and low-emission vehicles, governments across the EU need to ramp up investments in charging and refuelling infrastructure, and need to put in place meaningful and sustainable incentives to stimulate sales of alternatively-powered vehicles, says ACEA.
The new report shows that sales of electrically-chargeable cars in the EU increased by 110% over the past three years. During the same period however, the number of charging points grew by just 58% (to under 200,000) – demonstrating that investment in infrastructure is not keeping pace with increased sales of electric vehicles.
“This is potentially very dangerous, as we could soon reach a point where growth of electric vehicle uptake stalls if consumers conclude there are simply not enough charging points where they need to travel, or that they have to queue too long for a fast charger,” warned ACEA Director General, Eric-Mark Huitema.
Indeed, ACEA’s analysis reveals that just one in seven charging points in the EU is a fast charger at the moment.
Only 28,586 charging points are suitable for fast charging (with a capacity of ≥22kW), while normal points (<22kW) account for the vast majority (171,239).
Many of the so-called ‘normal’ charging points that are included in EU statistics are common-or-garden, low-capacity power sockets that are not suitable for charging vehicles at an acceptable speed, such as ordinary power outlets in garages.
Another key finding of ACEA’s report is that the existing infrastructure remains highly unevenly distributed throughout the EU.
Four countries covering 27% of the region’s total surface area account for more than 75% of all electric charging points.
The Netherlands, accounts for 25.4% of all charging points, Germany 20.3%, France 15.2% and the UK 14.3%.
The country with the most infrastructure, the Netherlands, has over 1,000 times more charging points than the country with the least infrastructure – Cyprus which has just 38 charging points.
ACEA has been calling on the European Commission to fast-track the review of the EU Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Directive as part of its COVID recovery plan, including clear and binding deployment targets for all member states.
“With Europe’s higher climate ambitions in mind, there is now an even greater urgency to upgrade the infrastructure requirements for all alternative vehicles,” Mr Huitema stressed.