Japan has more electric car charging ports than gas stations
It appears the Japanese are catching on to electric cars big time. The country has more charging spots than gas stations, the Japan Times quotes data from Nissan Motor Corporation.
Quick charger for electric car in Japan. It takes 30 minutes to charge electric car batttery. pic.twitter.com/3ySSqXt8pe
— แมกนีโต (@Saran2530) August 3, 2013
The number of power locations in Japan both on the street and in homes is now 40,000, which is more than the country’s 34,000 gas stations, according to Nissan research.
#Apple announces electric car for 2019 http://t.co/YSx4lYNoWopic.twitter.com/aedc6eYeSu
— RT (@RT_com) September 22, 2015
Electric car support services are growing with the charging network constantly expanding and batteries getting more powerful. The increased availability is spurring sales of Nissan’s all-electric Leaf vehicle.
Japanese unveil electric car that doesn’t need battery https://t.co/33syOBWobipic.twitter.com/uwhZO8N2q3
— RT (@RT_com) March 19, 2016
“An important element of the continued market growth is the development of the charging infrastructure,” said Nissan Chief Financial Officer Joseph Peter.
The next big thing: a modest charger for electric vehicles in a back street in front of your corner shop. Japan here pic.twitter.com/IxkbBqY92T
— JAAP MODDER (@jaapmodder) June 25, 2015
The figure quoted by Nissan is highly inflated, as it includes home charging stations. The actual number of public quick chargers in Japan is just 6,469 compared to 3,028 in Europe or 1,686 in the US.
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The Japanese government aims to install two million charging stations by 2020. The cost of batteries used in next-generation vehicles is expected to fall to one-fortieth of 2006 prices by 2030, according to the country’s Economy Ministry. This is all expected to boost electric vehicle sales in Japan by as much as 50 percent by the end of the decade.