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07 Mar 20231 minute read

Long queues for East of England EV drivers waiting for high-speed public charge points

ECAtoday
Long queues for East of England EV drivers waiting for high-speed public charge points

Electric Vehicle drivers in the East of England sit in longer queues and must charge their vehicles at slower speeds than the rest of the country, according to new findings from the ECA.

Most councils in the region fell behind their own targets to install new fast EV public charge points (22kw or above) in 2022. Fewer than 1 in 10 councils (8%) reached their targets. For the majority (80%) of East of England councils, the most common charging speed is still 7kw or slower.

The data, gathered as part of a Freedom of Information request by ECA, also revealed that fewer than half of local councils in the East of England operate their own public EV charging points. When quizzed on the possibility of installing new EVCPs in future, over half (52%) said that energy network constraints in the region would prevent them from doing so.

Sean Gilvey, Managing Director at ECA Member firm Impact Renewable Energy Ltd in Norfolk, said:

“In the last few years, we have seen momentum gathering behind electric vehicles and demand for public charging points. But we have now reached a stage where people don’t have anywhere to charge their cars, and if they do, they face prohibitively long queues and waiting times.

“The East’s infrastructure has fallen out of step with demand, and the public’s enthusiasm for electric cars is now, sadly, declining.

“As a business we saw a sharp increase in demand for EV charge points around 2020 and 2021, but in the last year or so, this has dramatically reduced.”

The Government has set ambitious targets for the uptake of EVs, with plans to phase out the sale of new internal combustion engine cars by 2030 and install 300,000 new charge points. But, with only seven years to go, recent figures suggest we could be up to 20 years off-target.

Luke Osborne, ECA’s Energy & Emerging Technologies Solutions Advisor, said:

“More than 8,700 EV charge points were installed in 2022, bringing the UK total up to 37,000. But this is simply not fast enough to keep up with demand, let alone Government’s target of 300,000 charge points by 2030.

“Right now, there are an average of 30 electric vehicles to every charge point in the UK. We must act fast to reduce this disparity and make it as easy to charge an EV as it is to fill up on petrol or diesel.

“With time running out until the sale of new petrol and diesel cars are banned, we desperately need joined-up policy from central government that is passed down to local authorities, and then to the electrotechnical and engineering services businesses who will be collectively upgrading the nation’s infrastructure and making Britain Net Zero-ready.”

ECA’s research also found that the number of local authorities actively investing in public on-street charging points was growing steadily, but patchily, because of different approaches and levels of funding form central government.

ECA works closely with its Members, industry partners and Government to help Britain transition to Net Zero Carbon. We produce regular guidance notes, technical bulletins, and industry updates to keep Members at the forefront of the Net Zero transition. Learn more here.

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