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A piece of technology that provides electricity to electric cars is known as an EV charger. Its primary function is to maintain a vehicle’s mobility by recharging the battery of an EV.
Like any charging item or gadget, both electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles need an EV charger to keep the battery charged.
Electric cars are seeing significant growth as a result of growing environmental concerns and a desire for sustainable and energy-efficient mobility.
The market for electric car chargers has seen a surge in demand due to a number of causes, including governments promoting electric vehicles and charging infrastructure through specific regulations, subsidies, and tax refunds as well as growing demand for energy-efficient commuting.
The South Africa EV Charger Market accounted for $XX Billion in 2021 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2026, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2024 to 2030
Audi South Africa is pleased to announce a collaboration with Grid Cars to deploy ultra-rapid charging infrastructure across the nation. As a result, Audi will be the first electric car manufacturer to make an investment in this technology through openly accessible locations. Audi will be the first to introduce 150kW public chargers to the South African market.
An Audi e-Tron 55 (which has a 95kWh battery) would charge from zero to ninety percent in around 30 minutes thanks to the charge points’ maximum direct current (DC) output of 150kW.
In order to build on the current public charging network in South Africa for all-electric car owners, Audi will invest in establishing to 70 new EV charge connections across 33 sites.
With 82 new public charging stations in the nation’s key hubs and along often travelled holiday routes, Jaguar, in collaboration with electric car charging authority Grid Cars, has established the framework for the future of electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles in South Africa.
30 public charging stations will be built in South Africa’s major cities, including Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban, Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, East London, and Bloemfontein, in addition to the publicly accessible charging stations that will be placed in customer parking areas.
every Jaguar Land Rover retailer in the country. The Jaguar Powerway, a network of 22 charging stations along the N3 between Gauteng and Cape Town, will now also link South Africa’s urban centres.