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The hum of electric vehicles (EVs) navigating our streets is no longer a rare tune.

The U.S. has welcomed about a million new EVs in 2023, accounting for up to 6% of total vehicles sold, says Adam Happel, VP and head of growth at EVgo, one of the nation's largest public EV fast charging networks. By the middle of the decade, EVs are projected to represent a fifth of all new car sales in the U.S.

Such a steep ascent in demand underscores the urgent call for fast-charging stations. At the current rate of sales, the country needs 300,000 such stations. Right now, it has around 30,000.

“So, we need to essentially 10x the number of available stations across the U.S. in the next six years or so,” says Happel. “That's a lot of work.”

Challenges for the industry include significantly expanding the power capacity to fuel the charging stations, especially in commercial realms where the integration of charging infrastructure requires a meticulous blend of planning and resource allocation.

“Commercial deployment of charging infrastructure has its set of power requirements, often underestimated,” says Josephine Tucker, head of clean energy and infrastructure advisory at JLL. “Especially in scenarios like school districts electrifying their bus fleet, the power gap is stark, necessitating a blend of on-site renewable energy solutions to accelerate the project.”

In the latest episode of JLL’s Trends & Insights podcast, listen to experts Happel at EVgo and Tucker at JLL talk with host James Cook about the past, present and future of charging stations and EVs.

Charging Electric Vehicle