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BackUK Electric Vehicle Charger Rollout Slows Amid Cost Pressures and Target Uncertainty
UK Electric Vehicle Charger Rollout Slows Amid Cost Pressures and Target Uncertainty
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Guardian UK3 g önceBusiness3 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

UK Electric Vehicle Charger Rollout Slows Amid Cost Pressures and Target Uncertainty

L'essentiel

  • The UK's public EV charger installation rate has slowed to 10% in H1 2026, down from over 40% in 2024.
  • This slowdown, driven by cost pressures and uncertainty over government sales targets like the ZEV mandate, threatens the 2030 goal of 300,000 chargers.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

The UK's electric vehicle charger rollout has slowed due to cost pressures and uncertainty over government sales targets, impacting the pace of transition away from petrol and diesel engines.

Taille de police

The UK’s rollout of electric vehicle chargers has slowed amid challenging cost pressures and uncertainty over government sales targets.

Charger companies installed 5,100 public charge points in the first half of 2026, pushing the total to 121,171, according to Zapmap, a data company. That was a 10% increase on the same point a year before – well below growth rates above 40% in 2024.

Although the pace of growth may be expected to slow as the network grows, it needs to remain high to meet the UK government’s target of 300,000 public chargers by 2030 and match the growth in electric car sales. The number of EVs on Britain’s roads surpassed 2m in April.

However, charger installations have slowed markedly in the last two years, amid concerns over the pace of the transition away from petrol and diesel engines.

The car industry across UK and Europe has lobbied heavily for the government to weaken sales targets, known as the zero emission vehicle (ZEV) mandate, which enforce a rapid increase in the number of electric cars sold each year.

The Labour government has already added loopholes known as “flexibilities” to the mandate, which was brought in by the Conservatives in 2023. The flexibilities allow car manufacturers to sell more petrol engine cars, and the government is considering also lowering the headline target for EV sales from 80% by 2030 to as low as 50%.

Jarrod Birch, the head of policy and public affairs at ChargeUK, a lobby group for the charging industry, said: “The public charging network has doubled over the past three years, and rapid charging is growing quickest of all, with nine in 10 built outside of London in the past 12 months. It is a British success story, funded by private investment made on the certainty of future customers that the government’s ZEV mandate provides.

“But the mandate has now been argued over for three years, under two governments. It is no surprise that investors are hesitating as doubt surrounds the policy once again.”

Zapmap’s figures suggested firms were focusing particularly on ultra-rapid chargers, with a 37% increase in numbers year on year.

Ultra-rapid chargers, which can deliver more than 150 kilowatts (kW) of power, tend to be situated by motorways and main roads, for drivers to top up quickly on longer journeys. That means they tend to be more profitable than standard or rapid chargers, as companies can levy higher prices and serve more drivers each day.

Melanie Shufflebotham, Zapmap’s co-founder and chief operating officer, said the installations in the first half of 2026 still represented “a steady rollout” overall, with “high growth” in the ultra-rapid segment.

She added that councils were finally rolling out chargers funded by the government’s local electric vehicle infrastructure (Levi) scheme. The funding is aimed at providing more on-street chargers for people who do not have private parking.

“The Levi funding has seen an increased number of tenders awarded, and these – generally on-street chargers – have started to be rolled out locally,” Shufflebotham said. “This, alongside the uplift in councils supporting through-pavement charging, and an increase in local charging at supermarkets, car parks and fuel forecourts, will encourage more and more drivers to go electric.”

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • Government may lower the headline EV sales target from 80% to 50% by 2030.

    Possible · En quelques mois

Questions ouvertes

  • Will the government lower the EV sales target?
  • How will investor confidence be restored?
  • Will charger installation rates rebound?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by Guardian UK.

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