Skip to main content

How to solve EV charging's three main problems

Related Content

  • Green hydrogen producer Lhyfe quadruples revenues in 2024
    March 31, 2025

     

    European green and renewable hydrogen producer Lhyfe quadrupled its revenues to €5.1m in 2024, compared to 2023 (€1.3m), after having more than doubled its revenues between 2022 (€0.6m) and 2023.

    Lhyfe says that, despite concerns about the pace of development of the green hydrogen sector in Europe, thr group has managed to hold its own thanks to a strategy that is clearly paying off, and continues to grow nicely.

  • A real-world EV charging experience in Sweden
    May 15, 2023
    EVC&I reader Phil Woodgate has written in with a real-life view of the EV charging experience while on holiday in Sweden. It sheds some light on the need for more investment in charging infrastructure to improve current levels of user-friendliness.
  • £63m support for UK EV charging
    July 14, 2025
    Government package to support at-home charging for households without driveways and transition NHS fleets
  • Is EV charger uptime beyond 97% a reasonable goal?
    April 14, 2023
    The word “uptime” has generated a great deal of conversation in the US EV charging industry. The U.S. Federal Highway Administration has mandated “that each charging port must have an average annual uptime greater than 97 percent.” The target has been established, and now it’s up to the industry to meet it. Pete Kennedy reports.