HomeTechTalkWho Will Provide Public EV Charging As Promised In Malaysia

Who Will Provide Public EV Charging As Promised In Malaysia

Many have promised public EV charging, but all ‘wayang’ until now.

The year 2020 and 2021, so far, has been troubling for the global automotive industry and Malaysia has seen and will be seeing more issues with Covid-19 and the chip shortages.

However, business has to continue and many car brands in Malaysia are starting to look at selling electric vehicles. Some are taking a back seat for a while due to the limited charging infrastructure, others need to move forward as their ‘headquarters’ want to keep to their ‘global’ EV only showroom sales promise.

EV Charging As Promised In Malaysia

At the recent BMW iX EV launch, BMW Group Malaysia made a promise on rapidly expanding the BMW i dealer network to key cities across the country. DC Fast Chargers will also be installed at all BMW i dealers for public use to further accelerate the availability of charging infrastructures in Malaysia, along with Rapid-charging DC Chargers to be made available for quick on-the-go charging at selected dealerships nationwide.

Volvo Cars will start selling their full electric vehicles very soon, starting with the X40 Recharge EV early 2022. They launched the XC40 PHEV in February this year to get the program going and after the XC40 EV is launched, we will see other new Volvo’s like the C40 and XC60 and XC90 EV coming into Malaysia. Like BMW Malaysia, they will also need to look into a fast charging network. Will they make the investment?

EV Charging

Porsche in Malaysia has seen sales success with its Taycan EV and this has prompted them to work with Shell to set up an EV charging network. With 12 charging points planned at six Shell stations located along the North-South Highway in Malaysia, the move will enable EV drivers to travel between Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and Penang without range anxiety (assuming there is no other vehicle hogging the space)

According to Porsche, each Shell station will be equipped with a 180 kW direct-current (DC) charger with two CCS Type 2 charging connectors. This allows a single vehicle to be charged at up to 180 kW, or two vehicles simultaneously at up to 90 kW each.

Nissan Leaf Public EV Charging As Promised In Malaysia

The charging network will be introduced in stages, starting with four stations (Seremban R&R Northbound, Seremban R&R Southbound, Jalan Ayer Hitam and Tangkak Layby) in the second half of this year and the rest (Simpang Pulai R&R and Tapah R&R) by the first half of 2022.

We have witnessed a few organizations over the years promising electric vehicle charging stations for public use in grand scale and numbers. Even until recently, MAAri and Pekema (AP Holders for recon cars)held a press conference during the last lockdown and promised 1,000 public charging stations nationwide (easy to make promises and execution will soon be forgotten as before).

Meanwhile, over the years we have been to press conferences where Greentech Malaysia and European PHEV car brands have talked about charging stations and EV adoption since 2015 with just a very small handful of results to show.

Volta Public EV Charging As Promised In Malaysia

In 2015 there was an ambitious plan to have 25,000 ChargeEV stations nationwide by 2020, this was before Covid-19 and today, we are do not see even 5 percent of that target up and running around the country. 

At the time ChargeEV was working with BMW i to get the network running and if you visit the website you will  see the ‘I’ logo still showing. Then in late August 2021 BMW Malaysia launched their electric vehicle SUV ahead of Mercedes’s planned EV launch with a target to have their own DC Fast Chargers installed at all BMW i dealers for public use to further accelerate the availability of charging infrastructures in Malaysia, along with Rapid-charging DC Chargers to be made available for quick on-the-go charging at selected dealerships nationwide.

We wait for another MOU signing ceremony and see.

Daniel Sherman Fernandez
Daniel Sherman Fernandez
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