Skip to main content

Arup: we need to speed up EV collaboration

From Los Angeles to New Delhi, cities may have to expand their current charging infrastructure for electric vehicles by 500% in the next few years. Arup’s Dominic Taylor asks how cities, infrastructure owners and transport authorities can make joined-up decisions ive years from now, low emission vehicles – predominantly electric vehicles (EVs) - will be transforming the streets of our cities – as long as these vehicles have somewhere to charge. Drivers of EVs without driveways, and unable to charge at hom
September 26, 2019 Read time: 4 mins
London will need a lot more of these© Spolcycstudio | Dreamstime.com
From Los Angeles to New Delhi, cities may have to expand their current charging infrastructure for electric vehicles by 500% in the next few years. 7942 Arup’s Dominic Taylor asks how cities, infrastructure owners and transport authorities can make joined-up decisions

Five years from now, low emission vehicles – predominantly electric vehicles (EVs) - will be transforming the streets of our cities – as long as these vehicles have somewhere to charge.

Drivers of EVs without driveways, and unable to charge at home, need public charge points – and lots of them, whether during the journey or at the destination. Applying our modelling and analysis to one UK city, we’ve estimated it needs to expand its charging network by 500% in the next five years to help it meet its aspirations for a cleaner, lower-carbon future. Across the world, from Los Angeles to New Delhi, every city faces this problem. So, where should these charge points be located?

Let the data speak

The key to answering this question is for different city bodies and stakeholders – transport authorities, regeneration teams and energy distribution network operators – to embark on data-driven collaboration. Modelling city data can help municipalities and local authorities implement an EV charging network that supports mobility for all. If everyone is to benefit from the imminent EV revolution, city authorities urgently need to lead a collaborative effort to install the right number of charging points in the right places. City authorities already have access to data on socio-economic factors such as the types of housing in different areas, and to transport data that plots the origins and destinations of people’s journeys. Combining this in a detailed model can provide a picture of how many charging points are needed, the types required for the likely mix of vehicles, the benefits that could be derived from charge points in different locations and the likely demands on the energy network. We’ve created a detailed model that combines socio-economic, housing, transport data, with EV adoption rates and vehicle performance data. These are brought together in a proprietary demand model to provide a detailed picture of EV charging demand through the day, across an entire city. This allows us to test different scenarios and create plans integrating EV charging demand, with charge point placement and grid capacity.

Don’t leave it to the market

Taking a network-wide approach is vital. Municipalities and city authorities could leave installing chargers entirely up to commercial charging companies. But would the market ensure that a cross-section of society has access to charging, or would firms simply cherry-pick the most profitable locations? Would the market investigate how electric buses could share their charging infrastructure with private cars?

No. This is too important to leave to the market alone, or indeed any to single body. Because charging infrastructure affects issues such as air quality, decarbonisation and more broadly a city’s reputation, everyone needs to be involved – with local government taking a leading role in the EV revolution and creating an EV masterplan focused on achieving the widest-ranging benefits and supported by the whole community.

Key EV considerations
• Charging infrastructure is key to EV take-up and needs to support different road users with different behaviours

• On-street charging in residential areas will not happen at pace or scale. People without off-street parking need destination and en route charging to convince them to use EVs

• City authorities need to take a leading role in creating a joined-up plan for installing EV charge points, otherwise coverage will be patchy. And they urgently need a lot more charge points

•  Modelling combines city data to help define the optimum number, type and location of charge points


For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The free and open internet is dead
    June 25, 2018
    A key US vote may have changed what internet service providers are allowed to charge and how they restrict content: Joe Dysart explains why this has consequences for ITS companies. While most people were rushing around last December, grabbing last-minute gifts for the holidays, the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) voted to drive a stake into the heart of the free and open internet. In a majority vote, the agency killed ‘net neutrality’ - a policy that has prevented your regional internet service
  • Air quality tops transportation agendas
    November 17, 2014
    Colin Sowman catches up on some of the latest research around outdoor pollution and looks at options available to authorities in areas of poor air quality. Iair quality hasn’t already reached the top of the agenda in transportation department meetings in your area, it probably soon will with national, trans-national and even global bodies calling for authorities to reduce pollution levels.
  • Moving pictures: live-stream body-worn cameras hit Manila
    June 5, 2018
    Makati, the financial centre of the Philippines, is home to just half a million residents. However, the daytime population of Makati - one of 16 cities that make up the metropolitan Manila area – is estimated to be more than three times that. Home to the highest concentration of multi-national and local corporations in the Philippines, it is a commercial hub: 600,000 vehicles are thought to move through downtown Makati on a typical weekday. Maintaining traffic flow and responding quickly to incidents is the
  • Flexibility, interoperability is key to future traffic management
    February 3, 2012
    Jon Taylor of Faber Maunsell and Tabatha Bailey of Transport for London describe how an unusual mix of traffic practitioners, researchers and industry are working together to build new tools for the future. As we face higher expectations for managing congestion from both citizens and politicians, and as more and more data is becoming available from new sources, our traffic management challenge is changing.