GRIDSERVE Electric Super Hub Opens in UK
GRIDSERVE’s new electric super hub makes taking your EV to the beach that much easier.
GRIDSERVE’s new electric super hub makes taking your EV to the beach that much easier.
Two new Electric Super Hubs at Moto Washington North and South on the A1(M) have opened, according to GRIDSERVE and Moto, allowing for quick, reliable charging on one of the busiest roads in the UK. Six 350kW-capable high-power chargers are included in each of the Electric Super Hubs, expanding the … [continued]
The fastest public auto charger in the UK has been installed by GRIDSERVE at Braintree Electric Forecourt and is now open to the general public for the first time in the UK. It can add around 100 miles in less than 5 minutes and can deliver a maximum output of … [continued]
Companies in Norway and the UK are inventing the service stations of the future that will cater to the needs of EV drivers.
GRIDSERVE went live on YouTube on July 1 and unveiled plans to develop a massive £100 million electric vehicle charging infrastructure project. The project, named the GRIDSERVE Electric Highway, will have a network of over 50 electric hubs. The hubs will have 300 rapid chargers at over 150 locations. Ten … [continued]
A couple of months ago, I talked with Roger Atkins of Electric Vehicles Outlook about the impressive “Electric Forecourts” that British firm Gridserve is developing and planning, starting with one that was under development at the time and has just now been completed.
In this episode of our CleanTech Talk podcast interview series, Zachary Shahan, Director and CEO of CleanTechnica, and Roger Atkins, founder of Electric Vehicles Outlook Ltd., sit down to talk about the future of electric vehicles, wireless charging, and supply chains.
Too much cleantech news is a good thing, but it sometimes means I need to stuff a bunch of big stories into one article. Following some roundups of autonomous driving news and battery & EV charging news, here’s one more roundup of some cool cleantech stories no one wanted to take and write full pieces about. This one is 100% focused on solar power.
The UK government, like the eccentric Don Quixote, is charging on without a rational plan for charging infrastructure. What has been required since 2010 when the first viable EVs started to emerge is a central government plan and policy for charging infrastructure. In the absence of any such planning, charging points of all kinds have sprung up like weeds in a neglected garden, with no specifications for siting, for access, or for payment.
This article is about the new Gridserve EV charging stations to be set up in the UK.