Skip to main content

New Zealand entrepreneur to build country’s first fast-charging network

Founder and managing director of Charge.net.nz, Steve West, aims to build New Zealand’s first electric vehicle (EV) charging network. He claims to have identified 75 sites across the country and plans to have fast chargers installed on all of them by the end of 2017.
May 26, 2015 Read time: 2 mins

Founder and managing director of %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal Charge.net.nz Visit http://charge.net.nz/ false http://charge.net.nz/ false false%>, Steve West, aims to build New Zealand’s first electric vehicle (EV) charging network. He claims to have identified 75 sites across the country and plans to have fast chargers installed on all of them by the end of 2017.

EV charger manufacturer, Brisbane-based 7335 Tritium, has shipped the first instalment of a major order placed by the company; 23 Veefil 50 kW DC fast chargers, which support both CHAdeMO & SAE-Combo standards, will form the first phase of the three-year project and will be deployed in Auckland, Hamilton, Wellington and Christchurch. The first unit is expected to be deployed in Auckland in June 2015.

According to West, “EVs are perfect for New Zealand; our electricity generation is 80 per cent renewable and fossil fuels are expensive to export to a relatively isolated Pacific island nation.  New Zealand currently has only around 250 pure EVs, but second-hand vehicles, particularly from Japan, are becoming available at a very reasonable price and as we roll out the fast-charging network, I anticipate we will see a rapid uptake in the country.”

Tritium’s commercial director, Paul Sernia comments, “Steve West is a true evangelist for the benefits of EVs.  He’s an enthusiastic EV owner and driver himself and has a real vision of the benefits this fast-charging network could bring to New Zealand.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Uber to redirect focus to bikes and electric scooters
    August 28, 2018
    Uber intends to focus more on its electric scooter and bike business as it says individual modes of transport are better-suited to inner city travel. Dara Khosrowshahi, Uber’s CEO, believes users will make more frequent, shorter journeys in the future, the Financial Times reports. "During rush hour, it is very inefficient for a one-tonne hulk of metal to take one person ten blocks,” he says. Uber’s Jump electric bikes are now available in eight US cities such as San Francisco and Washington DC, and are
  • Exhibition space at ITS World Congress going fast
    May 17, 2012
    With over five months to go before the 18th World Congress on Intelligent Transport Systems gets underway in Orlando, Florida (from October 16-20), 89 per cent of the current exhibit floor plan has now been reserved, according to ITS America's director of business development, Barbara M. O'Connor.
  • Register now for 2nd European SUMP Conference
    May 22, 2015
    The second European Conference on Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans (SUMP) takes place in Bucharest, Romania, at Politehnica University of Bucharest on 16 and 27 June 12015. It is the principal annual event for the international community of practitioners, policy makers and academics from across Europe to come together to debate key issues, highlight developments in mobility planning and exchange ideas and experience. Under the overall theme of the conference, ‘Sustainable mobility for everyone’, nine
  • Fingerprint security solutions from Suprema
    November 20, 2013
    Suprema’s new BioMini Slim is a high-level access-management solution for PCs. Ruggedised to IP65, and with a sleek, ergonomic design, it features Suprema’s latest 500dpi slim optical sensor, which boasts a large platen size for easy and reliable fingerprint captures. The BioMini Slim has FBI-PIV and mobile ID FAP 20 certifications and can capture fingerprints in harsh environmental conditions and direct sunlight up to 100,000 Lux. An SDK allows developers to create custom applications. The similarly featu