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Source: Aegis Energy

An artist’s impression of one of Aegis Energy’s upcoming hubs

Corpay, parent company of fuel-card firm Allstar, has entered into a three-year partnership that will give fleet drivers access to Aegis Energy’s forthcoming EV, hydrogen, CNG and HVO hubs.

The deal means drivers using Allstar’s Chargepass and EV charging cards will be able pay to replenish their vehicles at one of Aegis Energy’s ‘clean energy multi-hubs’.

Last year the Yorkshire-based company secured £100m from specialist energy-investment firm Quinbrook, and its first hub is set to open near Immingham, Lincs, this year, offering 400kW charging for electric vans and trucks, plus HVO and AdBlue pumps, with space for 40 HGVs and 25 vans.

Aegis Energy intends to open a further four hubs – in Sheffield, Dartford, Warrington and Corby – by the end of 2027, with 30 planned by 2030. The firm won planning permission in April 2026 for the Dartford project in the face of staunch local opposition, with that project set to offer EV, biofuel and hydrogen facilities at an industrial park just off the M1.

Michael Shaw, chief executive of Aegis Energy, said the Corpay partnership will “create a seamless electric charging and payment process for Britain’s fleets”, adding:

“The network that we are building, alongside partners like Corpay, will accelerate fleets’ transition to electric vehicles by bridging the gap between public charging and private depot infrastructure, giving fleets the confidence to electrify without needing to build their own charging estate.”

Tom Rowlands, managing director of global EV solutions for Corpay, desscribed Aegis Energy’s infrastructure as “exactly the kind of addition that strengthens the Allstar Commercial Charging Payment Network”.