County EV charging network sparks millions of greener miles

Millions of greener miles of support have been provided by Denbighshire County Council’s Electric Vehicle (EV) Charging Network

Millions of greener miles of support have been provided by Denbighshire County Council’s Electric Vehicle (EV) Charging Network since the first chargers came online.

This Wales Climate Week we take a look back at the impact the growth of the council’s charging network has had on providing a greener public mode of transport for residents and visitors.

The county network sparked into life in June 2021 with rapid chargers at Prestatyn and has since grown with more charging facilities provided at Rhyl, St Asaph, Denbigh, Ruthin, Corwen and Llangollen.

Bringing the network online is part of the council’s continuing work to reduce the county’s carbon footprint and support those drivers who want to transition to electric vehicles but may not have the facilities to charge at home.

Other electric fleet vehicle initiatives are also involved in the council’s goal to reduce carbon emissions, such as the electric powered Ruthin and Denbigh Flecsi bus services.

Since coming online in 2021, the chargers have supported EV drivers by providing 46,200 individual charging sessions to support lower emission public traveling.

That’s the equivalent of 1,100,000 kilowatt hours consumed which would keep 367 Tesla Model 3 cars doing an average of 12,000 miles a year, charged up for the full 12 months. The amount of delivered kilowatt hours would also keep your local supermarket powered up for a full year.

Converting the charging into miles, the EV charging network across Denbighshire has delivered over three million miles for electric powered driving. That’s over 130 trips right around the earth and 950 times hopping on a flight from London to New York. And for a single EV owner, that number of miles generated by the network would keep you driving for well over 250 years.

The UK Government’s 99 percent uptime mandate for public EV charging ports was also introduced last year to make sure EV chargers are constantly working well for drivers who use them. The council’s network is currently running above this target at 99.95 percent.

Work on the additional charging network for a few sites has been supported by grant funding via the UK Government’s Office of Zero Emission Vehicles (OZEV). Chargers at Corwen’s Green Lane were funded by the UK Government's Levelling Up Fund.

Cllr Barry Mellor, Lead Member for Environment and Transport, said: “The creation of this charging network was an important step in our commitment to help our residents who want to move over to electric vehicles but don’t have the facility or off-road parking to do so. The provision of this network will help more to do so.

“We know also that it is helping local businesses as well who have electric vehicles in their fleet and also those with town premises as more EV users are discovering these locations and visiting local establishments and attractions while charging their vehicles along our network locations.

“With a continuing increase in electric vehicle use it has been important to get this infrastructure in place, not only for the users but also to support tackling climate change impact on our county by helping to reduce carbon emissions on the regions roads.”

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