By submitting this form, you are agreeing to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Coming Soon
Automobiles called electric vehicles (EVs) run wholly or primarily on electricity. Because of their low to no fossil fuel consumption, lack of moving parts that require maintenance, and low running costs, electric vehicles are extremely eco-friendly.
Electric cars work under the assumption that electrical energy is transformed into mechanical energy, which is then used to generate kinetic energy and enable motion.
In EVs, an electric motor is used instead of a conventional internal combustion engine. Electric energy is thus used in place of conventional fuel (petrol/diesel).
The Ireland Electric Vehicle Market accounted for $XX Billion in 2021 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2022 to 2030.
Ireland boosts the uptake of EVs with new measures.A number of subsidies and efforts to encourage a greater uptake of electric vehicles were announced by Ireland’s Department of Transport.
These include home charging programmes, a database of smart chargers, and a programme for commercial vehicles that allows companies and organisations to test out electric trucks.
Domestic charging the new initiatives, which were just unveiled, include a grant for apartment charging that will make it simpler for residents of apartments and other multi-unit buildings to charge EVs.
The home charger award will now be open to all tenants and homeowners, regardless of whether they are EV owners or not, according to a second announcement made by the transport minister.
This may also be utilised by guests or in rental lodging.The EV Smart Charger Register is a further initiative as a result.
With this, the government hopes to increase security, curb excessive electricity use, and “enable greater integration with renewable energy sources.”
Privately generated renewable energy can be collected and fed back into the grid via smart chargers. When energy is available and demand is low, EVs can charge and feed excess energy back into the grid using vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technology, which is enabled by smart chargers.