Transport

Maritime Transport and VEV complete 5MW electric truck charging infrastructure 

VEV has delivered one of the largest eHGV charging infrastructure deployments, installing 5MW of capacity for Maritime Transport.
_
James Evison

VEV has delivered one of the UK’s largest electric heavy goods vehicle (eHGV) charging infrastructure deployments, installing 5MW of high-power capacity across three logistics hubs for Maritime Transport.

It comes as Maritime aims to operate one of the cleanest full-load supply chains, with high-capacity charging infrastructure forming the backbone of that long-term transition across its national depot network, it said.

The project forms part of Maritime’s eHGV rollout under its Maritime Zero division, which is designed to accelerate fleet electrification at scale and build a commercially viable pathway to zero-emission freight.

Supported by the UK Government’s Zero Emission HGV and Infrastructure Demonstrator (ZEHID) Programme, the rollout aims to deploy high-capacity charging infrastructure across 13 of Maritime’s depots.

A total of 18 high-powered DC chargers have been installed by VEV across depots in Wakefield, Tilbury and Doncaster, with individual unit capacities ranging from 100kW to 400kW.

The system has been designed to support up to 36 electric trucks charging simultaneously, providing the capacity required for heavy-duty freight operations.  

Once fully operational, a total of 56 eHGVs will be powered by green electricity and are each expected to travel approximately 120,000km per year.

Delivered in strategic partnership with VEV, the rollout creates “a scalable platform capable of supporting continued growth in zero-emission freight operations, with the installation designed to accommodate future expansion as fleet numbers increase and additional charging capacity is required”, it said.

Tom Williams, Deputy CEO at Maritime Transport, said:

“We’ve got big ambitions on electrification, and this is a massive step forward from pilot phase into operational reality within our network.

“The infrastructure now in place gives us the capacity and confidence to expand our electric fleet as part of our long-term strategy to run the cleanest full-load supply chain in the UK.”

Marcelo Soares, VP Customers and Partnerships at VEV, said:

“Heavy freight is one of the most difficult sectors to decarbonise due to the scale of power required and the operational intensity of fleets.

“Delivering 5MW of charging capacity across live logistics depots shows that electric HGV infrastructure can now be deployed at a meaningful scale in the UK. This is not a pilot. It is real operational infrastructure.”

Image courtesy of Maritime/VEV

Related content

Electric Vehicles

Climate Group calls on EU policymakers to “lock in” EV transition

Climate Group is calling on EU policymakers to lock in the policy certainty needed to speed up the EV transition as a pa...
Infrastructure + technology

Believ works with Hertfordshire County Council

EV CPO Believ has been appointed by Hertfordshire County Council to deliver a £38m expansion of public EV charging infra...

Input your search keywords and press enter.

Be the first to know. Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss a story.

Our weekly newsletter delivers a round-up of the top stories from the sectors, along with our insight on the main events that week. Our highly engaged subscribers find our newsletter essential reading as a snapshot of what’s happening.

Fleet Electrification Forum

Save 30% on earlybird tickets. Before 30 April