Skip to main content

Nordic EV Summit

The Nordic EV Summit is highly renowned as one of the most important venues for the electric mobility industry in Northern Europe. We gather decision-makers from policy, industry, research and organizations, to connect and discuss how to electrify the transport sector as fast as possible. It is an international conference with participants from all over the world, where you will meet key actors involved in the rapidly growing EV community.

Nordic EV Summit
9th April, 2025 - 10th April, 2025Add to Calendar 2025-04-09 10:17:44 2025-04-10 10:17:44 Title Description Location Electrical Vehicle Charging & Infrastructure [email protected] Europe/London public

Event Organizer


Event Location

Oslo, Norway

Related Content

  • BSI publishes standards for transition to road freight ZEVs
    May 30, 2025
    New standards include design and implementation of publicly accessible charging sites for battery electric HGVs
  • Key steps to make EV fleet adoption move even faster
    January 22, 2024
    The EV industry is continually buzzing about adoption – much of it geared toward passenger vehicles. Will the public buy in, literally and figuratively? Are EV purchases on track? Will consumers overcome the anxiety that their vehicle’s battery charge will be insufficient to complete a journey or that there will not be enough charging stations on the way to their destination? As these questions are being asked about passenger vehicles, fleets are quietly moving toward EV adoption.
  • Opinion: The EV industry’s watershed moment is now in 2024, not 2035
    February 23, 2024
    The watershed moment for EVs is now, not in seven years says Alok Dubey of Monta. In fact, he expects 2024 to be the year when most people start to accept that cars powered by fossil fuels become a thing of the past and that electric vehicles are the way forward.
  • EVs or e-bikes: what is the future path for sustainable urban transport?
    January 26, 2024
    It is not EVs, but e-bikes, e-mopeds and e-scooters that are the vehicles of the future – at least for those travelling in cities. That was the gist of the argument in a provocative Financial Times opinion piece published this month by Paris-based journalist Simon Kuper. But is he right, and what are the implications for the ongoing rollout of EVs and the required charging infrastructure?