At a service station near Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport, a steady stream of motorists charge up their electric vehicles at “ultra-fast” power points. The whole process takes less than 20 minutes.
“It’s really great in the Netherlands. When you leave the Netherlands, the network is a lot thinner,” Jeroen Vever, a 37-year-old software developer fueling up his EV, told AFP by the charging “plug”.
Famed globally for an obsession with bikes and especially vulnerable to climate change due to its low-lying location, the Netherlands is proud of its “World Champion” status for EV charging points, with the EU’s densest network.
The small country has 145,000 public charging points—one third of the whole European total—with streets in major Dutch cities lined with gray metal power points seemingly posted every few meters.
In addition to this are hundreds of thousands of private chargers, much less powerful and therefore slower to “fill up” vehicles.
But only around 6,000 of these are “fast” or “ultra-fast” chargers.
While an impressive total in absolute terms, this leaves the Netherlands proportionally behind the Baltic states or countries in Central and Eastern Europe, which started later but jumped directly to fast chargers, according to the ChargeUp Europe association.
The Netherlands is scrambling to maintain its lead, but there are concerns the electric grid may not cope with a rapid expansion of the energy-gobbling fast chargers.
Electrifying car transport, well advanced in Europe and China, is one of the key pillars of a transition to a carbon-free world and will be a critical topic at the Dubai COP28 summit.
But as the Netherlands shows, EV sales go hand in hand with an efficient charging network.
“It’s chicken and egg,” said Michiel Langezaal, CEO and co-founder of Dutch firm Fastned, which installs ultra-fast points along European motorways.
“If there’s an ample and sufficient charging infrastructure, that helps people shift to sustainable mobility.”
The Dutch government wants all new cars to be electric by 2030 but even the current dense charging network would not be able to service such a fleet.
The answer: “It will be necessary to build more fast-charging stations”, according to Langezaal.
With the current number of electric vehicles, a total network of around 700 fast-charging stations—roughly one every 40 kilometers—is sufficient, Langezaal told AFP.