According to foreign media reports, Dutch electric vehicle charging network operator PowerGo has opened its largest HPC charging point to date in Europe.
The new fast charging park is located in Lillebælt along the E20 highway in Denmark.
It consists of seven 400-kilowatt charging piles, each with two charging ports.
, Earlier this year, PowerGo won a tender from the Danish Public Roads Authority (Vejdirektoratet) to expand its network of public charging stations, including a fast charging station in the Petit Belt Strait.
PowerGo’s new charging park is located on the E20 motorway, part of the Central Europe Transport Network (TEN-T).
The charging park has a total of 7 Alpitronic high-power charging piles, each with a power of up to 400 kilowatts, and is equipped with two CCS fast charging ports.
Each fast charging station is also equipped with a CHAdeMO connection port with a power of 60 kilowatts.
The charging park also has 14 covered parking spaces, 6 of which are suitable for longer vehicles, such as electric vehicles with trailers.
, Image source: PowerGo, users can use charging cards or apps provided by roaming partners to make payments, but these partners are not currently explicitly listed.
Users can also pay using PowerGo’s app, in which case customers will be able to enjoy dynamic charging prices.
“These prices are fair and transparent and fluctuate based on hourly electricity market prices,” PowerGo said in a press release.
Users can also use a debit or credit card to pay for temporary charging.
However, PowerGo did not mention specific charging standards in the press release.
, This is the second time PowerGo has won the bid for a project by the Danish Public Roads Authority.
Previously, the two sides had worked closely on another HPC charging pile project in Haderup, along Route 34.
The new site is also part of PowerGo’s plan to build a European charging network.
As part of the European Charging Network plan, PowerGo won 18 tenders in Denmark to build more than 1,600 public charging stations in the country.
, Return to the first electric network home page>,.