-£56 million of public and industry funding electrifies chargepoint plans across the country
-New LEVI capability funding also announced to help local authorities plan for new chargepoint infrastructure.
-Drivers from Cumbria to West Sussex to benefit from £56 million of support to continue the expansion of EV charging across the country
-Today’s funding supports growth of the charging network across England, adding a further 2,400 chargepoints, to help level up the country’s charging infrastructure
-16 local authorities, including Sunderland, Rotherham and Norfolk, will benefit from funding to support EV chargepoint rollout
An additional £56 million in public and industry funding for increasing electric vehicle (EV) chargepoints across the country has been announced today (21 February 2023) by Transport Minister Jesse Norman.
The new funding aims to help deliver up to a further 2,400 chargepoints set to be installed in the short term, while working to support local councils to deliver tens of thousands more in the long term.
The funding will expand the current Local Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (LEVI) pilot, boost the existing On-Street Residential Chargepoint Scheme (ORCS) and help councils across England secure dedicated resource to develop in-house expertise and capability to coordinate chargepoint plans and work with private operators – delivering a more comprehensive and reliable network of chargepoints for drivers.
In addition to expanding three of the original LEVI pilot schemes, there are also 16 new pilot scheme areas, a full breakdown of public and private funding below:
- £200,000 to Buckinghamshire
- £1.9 million to Cumbria
- £1 million to Hackney
- £2.3 million to Harborough
- £1.8 million to Hounslow
- £600,000 to Lancashire
- £1.6 million to Norfolk
- £1.6 million to Oxfordshire
- £1.6 million to Rotherham
- £800,000 to Sunderland
- £2.5 million to Waltham Forest
- £1 million to Warwickshire
- £8.5 million to West Midlands
- £2.9 million to West Sussex
- £3 million to West Yorkshire
- £1.9 million to York
- £7.4 million to Durham*
- £4.4 million to Barnet*
- £3.6 million to North Yorkshire*
*Denotes original pilot expansion.
Technology and Decarbonisation Transport Minister, Jesse Norman, said: ”The government is giving local authorities across England additional help today to energise their chargepoint roll-out plans.
”Today’s commitment will lead to thousands of new chargers being installed, and plans for 10s of thousands extra in due course, so that more people than ever can make the transition to using EVs.”
In total, £22m of government funding for the pilot areas is supported by an additional £17m of private funding, and £2m from public funds across local authorities.
In addition to expanding the pilot scheme, today also sees the launch of the £8m LEVI Capability Fund which is targeted at equipping local authorities with the skills and ambition to scale up their plans when it comes to their charging strategy.
The funding aims to help local authorities work in tandem with private business and chargepoint operators to drive the sustainable growth of local networks, building and utilising their collective knowledge and expertise to deliver the most ambitious chargepoint plans for their area.
Today also sees the government bringing forward a further £7m funding for the existing On-Street Residential Chargepoint Scheme, bringing the total funding this year to £37m. Three thousand chargepoints have already been installed under ORCS with a further 10,000 in the pipeline.
Several additional funding schemes are already open and available to help install chargepoints for EVs with government support, including the Workplace Charging Scheme, landlord grant and the private/rental grant.
- The government claims to have already spent over £2 billion to support the move to zero-emission vehicles, to help drive forward the decarbonisation of the UK’s entire transport system
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