Skip to main content

M2M and partner consortium developing infrastructure for electric vehicle charging

Telekom Austria Group M2M and its partner consortium is working to develop a complete infrastructure for the charging of Electric Vehicles (EVs) which includes navigation, billing and authorisation, load management and balancing, and reservations (including reservation with payment in order to stop charging point blocking).
October 24, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Julia Holbock shows off M2M's plans
Telekom Austria Group M2M and its partner consortium is working to develop a complete infrastructure for the charging of Electric Vehicles (EVs) which includes navigation, billing and authorisation, load management and balancing, and reservations (including reservation with payment in order to stop charging point blocking).

The group started work to realise a national network in 2010 and at present there are around 30 charging points nationally. Some are free-standing, although in order to make best possible use of existing infrastructure some have been combined with phone booths; nationally, around 15 per cent of the country’s 15,000 phone booths are anticipated to be well-placed to also serve as EV fuelling points.

“Two years ago we saw a lot of hype pertaining to EVs, then a bit of a slow-down. But OEMs’ development cycles take between five and seven years, and we’re now starting to see EVs emerge at a price point which are accessible to more than just the early adopters,” says Friedrich Vogel of the partner consortium. “Once serial production starts, marketing of EVs will follow and at around 2013/14 I expect to see a tipping point for e-Mobility.

“At that point, if I have a car that can offer 500km with a range extender or 100km on battery, with less pollution and tax, why am I going to buy a hydrocarbon car? But if we don’t have the charging infrastructure in place, acceptance and adoption will be much lower.”

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal <span class="mouselink">www.m2m.telekomaustria.com </span> www.m2m.telekomaustria.com false http://www.m2m.telekomaustria.com%20/ false false%>

Related Content

  • October 31, 2014
    Viajeo Plus sustainable urban mobility showcase
    Viajeo Plus, an EC funded FP7 international cooperation project for implementation of innovative and efficient urban mobility solutions, has organised a City Showcase in Chengdu Heritage Park, China, on 11 November. The event aims at facilitating knowledge exchange and experience sharing between China and Europe on sustainable urban mobility. It will gather technical experts, policy makers and researchers to present their achievements on sustainable urban mobility solutions, to discuss their needs and to
  • March 31, 2015
    Limited places remaining for FIRM15 infrastructure meeting
    The FEHRL Infrastructure Research Meeting 2015 (FIRM15) will be held on 22 and 23 April 2015 at the Diamant Centre in Brussels, Belgium. Held every two years, for the first time FIRM15 is opening up to all transport modes with speakers and participants from the rail sector. With the theme of ‘Innovative maintenance of Transport Infrastructure: Faster, cheaper, more reliable, safer and greener’, FIRM15 aims at mapping the problems and challenges of innovative maintenance of transport infrastructure;
  • September 8, 2014
    Bill Ford discusses future mobility at World Congress
    Bill Ford’s thoughts on the future of mobility may be a surprise to many as he told delegates about his concerns over what he termed ‘Global Gridlock’. “You can’t just keep on sending more vehicles into the urban environment, it isn’t going to work.”
  • November 8, 2018
    PSC Solar to implement EV chargers in Africa
    PSC Solar, the research and development subsidiary of PSC Industries, will deploy electric vehicle (EV) chargers across four African nations, according to media reports. Chargers will be installed in Nigeria, Ghana, Niger and Benin in preparation for the arrival of EVs. Patrick Owelle, CEO of the PSC Solar, says governments all over the world are starting to ban diesel and petrol engines due to climate change and pollution and that Africa must also take a position on the issue. He says PSC’s charg