Skip to main content

EU to fund pan-European EV infrastructure demo project

An innovative project to demonstrate what a pan-European infrastructure and service provision for electric vehicles could look like will receive almost €5 million (US$7.1 million) in EU co-funding from the TEN-T budget. The project, which was presented under the 2010 TEN-T Annual Call, constitutes an essential first step towards a possible viable deployment of open-access infrastructure for electric vehicles across the EU over the next ten years.
April 17, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
An innovative project to demonstrate what a pan-European infrastructure and service provision for electric vehicles could look like will receive almost €5 million (US$7.1 million) in EU co-funding from the TEN-T budget. The project, which was presented under the 2010 TEN-T Annual Call, constitutes an essential first step towards a possible viable deployment of open-access infrastructure for electric vehicles across the EU over the next ten years.

The project will combine traditional road infrastructure, ITS services, and an original electric network infrastructure composed of battery charging stations, powered with renewable energy sources wherever possible, and groundbreaking fully-automated battery switching stations.

Three pilot projects will run in The Netherlands and Denmark, allowing for urban heavy use, long distance and intermodal-switch life-size tests. In Amsterdam, electric taxis will ensure their duty to and from the airport (urban context), while in Copenhagen and Aarhus, stations will be positioned next to highways and railways to enable long distance and intermodality trials.

In parallel, an extensive feasibility study addressing conditions for service concepts, infrastructure requirements and network planning, set the groundwork for the standardised mass deployment into the TEN-T network of these stations, allowing not only long distance travel, but also transport co-modality. As a result, it is being claimed that the project will significantly contribute towards more sustainable, economical and environmentally friendly transportation alternatives on the TEN-T network and the EU as a whole.

The project will run until December next year and involves Denmark, The Netherlands, Spain, Austria, Belgium and Luxembourg.

Related Content

  • Sharing real-time information ‘could save the transport sector billions each year’
    September 29, 2015
    A European research project led by Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands makes real-time information available for the whole transport chain for the first time. The GET Service software platform, which is being presented at an international symposium in Rotterdam on 1 October, enables a flexible response to unforeseen circumstances, making transport faster, more environmentally friendly and cheaper each year by many billions. The researchers are confident that the total fuel consumption
  • Cooperative road infrastructures - progress and the future
    February 1, 2012
    Robert Bertini, deputy administrator of the USDOT's Research and Innovative Technology Administration, discusses the research and deployment paths of cooperative road infrastructures. High-level analysis by the US's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) of the potential of Vehicle-to-Infrastructure/Infrastructure-to-Vehicle (V2I/I2V) and Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) technologies indicates that V2V could in exclusivity address a large proportion of crashes involving unimpaired drivers. In fact,
  • EU-wide Railway at low level status of deployment
    October 6, 2017
    Deployment of the European Rail Traffic Management System (ERTMS), an EU-wide railway signalling system is proceeding at a very low-level, according to a new report from European Court of Auditors. In assessing if the ERTMS had been proper planned, deployed and managed, the auditors visited Denmark, Germany, Spain, Italy, Poland and the Netherlands and detected a reluctance from infrastructure managers to invest in the necessary equipment due the expense and a lack individual business cases.
  • EU-wide Railway at low level status of deployment
    October 6, 2017
    Deployment of the European Rail Traffic Management System (ERTMS), an EU-wide railway signalling system is proceeding at a very low-level, according to a new report from European Court of Auditors. In assessing if the ERTMS had been proper planned, deployed and managed, the auditors visited Denmark, Germany, Spain, Italy, Poland and the Netherlands and detected a reluctance from infrastructure managers to invest in the necessary equipment due the expense and a lack individual business cases.