Mobility

200,000 more electric vehicle charging stations planned in next 4 years

average range

Photo: Pixabay

Published

June 13, 2018

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

June 13, 2018

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Romania intends to install 200,000 electric vehicle charging stations in the next four years, as part of efforts to boost its share of renewables for fuels used in road transport, which is at only 1% currently, Minister of Energy Anton Anton has said, Romania’s Business Review has reported.

Earlier this year, Romanian renewable energy company Renovatio and Croatia’s telecommunications services provider Hrvatski Telekom said that they will install the first 23 fast charging stations for electric vehicles in Romania by the end of 2018, marking the start of a project to set up a network of 69 fast charging stations and 4 ultra-fast charging stations in the two countries.

According to Anton, going from 1% to 20%-40% for renewables in transport will require a lot of money, which Romania does not currently have.

“There is a very good chance that the percentage will grow soon: we’re accessing EU funds, there is a national strategy with a huge number of electric car charging stations, and we offer some of the largest bonuses for electric cars: EUR 10,000, larger than in any European country,” Anton was quoted as saying.

Electric, hybrid car sales on the rise

In the first quarter of 2018, the number of electric and hybrid cars sold in Romania jumped 62.4% year-on-year, to 661, according to the Association of Cars Producers and Importers (APIA).

In Q1, the share of green cars among cars sold nationally stood at 2.2%, up from 1.7% in the same period a year earlier, Business Review wrote.

According to government forecasts, Romanians are expected to buy 2,000 electric cars in 2018 through the Rabla Plus subsidy program.

Overall renewables target for 2020 already reached

Romania is otherwise among leading EU member states when it comes to reaching its overall 2020 renewables target, of 24%, which it attained in 2016.

The country could adopt a target of 31%-32% percent for renewable energy in 2030, according to Zoltan Nagy-Bege, vice president of the National Regulatory Authority for Energy (ANRE).

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

serbia ippc permits reri report law minic popovic vojvodic

Major industrial polluters in Serbia continue to pollute air, soil, water without control

08 December 2025 - Around 150 companies, potentially major polluters of water, air, and soil, hadn't obtained an IPPC permit by December 31, 2024

More than 330,000 Europeans died due to air pollution in 2023

More than 330,000 Europeans died due to air pollution in 2023

05 December 2025 - The EEA has determined that in 2023 there were 333,000 cases of premature death linked to exposure to particulate matter, ozone and nitrogen dioxide.

Wpd obtains wind power approvals in Greece for 225 MW

Wpd obtains wind power approvals in Greece for 225 MW

04 December 2025 - Wpd has won environmental approvals for a wind power project of 147.6 MW in Central Greece and one for 77 MW in Thrace

north macedonia skopje energy efficiency public buildings

North Macedonia plans energy renovation of 14 major public buildings

28 November 2025 - The authorities have prepared a plan for the reconstruction of buildings used by the state administration for the period 2025–2028