Wednesday, May 20, 2026

ChargeLab and ChargerHelp form strategic partnership to maximize EV charger uptime


ChargerHelp’s mission is to improve the parlous state of public EV charging reliability. The company offers a Reliability as a Service contract, under which customers pay a fixed monthly fee for unlimited Operations & Maintenance (O&M) support and a guaranteed level of uptime. (See our in-depth interview with ChargerHelp CEO Kameale Terry.)

Now the company has formed a reseller partnership with ChargeLab, a provider of EV charging station management software.

According to a 2025 study by J.D. Power, some 14% of charging attempts fail—and hardware malfunctions are not the primary cause. According to ChargerHelp, the root of the problems lies in “a siloed ecosystem where data from utilities, management platforms and software overlays do not communicate effectively.” This lack of interoperability can create “silent failures,” meaning that a charger appears functional on a digital map but is physically inoperable.

By integrating real-time digital monitoring and field services maintenance into a continuous feedback loop, ChargeLab and ChargerHelp are establishing a new standard of “unified orchestration.” This approach aims to drastically reduce Mean Time to Repair (MTTR) and push the industry toward reliable 99% uptime.

ChargeLab acts as the primary interface, handling ticket intake, initial diagnostics and basic remote troubleshooting, feeding critical baseline data into the partnership. When remote actions cannot resolve an issue, validated data is transferred to ChargerHelp, which uses its EMPWR platform for root-cause analysis and dispatches certified EVSE technicians.

“Reaching real reliability as an industry is an all-hands-on-deck effort that takes intentionality and a willingness to understand the nuanced reasons things fail, not just surface-level fixes,” said Kameale Terry. “As an industry, getting to the 90% uptime range was hard, but moving from 97% toward 99% is an entirely different challenge that requires tight orchestration across people, systems and data.”

“ChargeLab’s entire charging station management platform is oriented around uptime, reliability, and getting EV drivers back on the road faster,” said Zak Lefevre, co-founder and CEO of ChargeLab. “A key part of reliability is recognizing when a problem can be solved strictly in the CSMS, versus when additional interventions are needed. ChargerHelp’s Reliability as a Service eliminates operational ambiguity. It enables unified orchestration, from firmware to the cloud to technicians on the ground. Customers get a single contract, a joint onboarding experience and integrated systems that fix issues faster and smarter.”

Source: ChargerHelp



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2027 Volvo EX60 First Drive: Volvo starts over on EVs with midsize SUV


Quiet, calm, and identifiably a Volvo, the EX60 expands the brand’s EV lineup into the popular midsize SUV segment—in a variety of performance levels and prices.

The 2027 Volvo EX60 is only the brand’s second ground-up battery-electric vehicle, after the larger US-built three-row EX90 SUV launched in September 2024. That model had major teething troubles in its software, though they’ve now largely been resolved. Two years later, the smaller midsize EX60 uses a different, new dedicated EV platform. Within a year the EX60 lineup will include three distinct models: P6, P10, and P12, with three different battery capacities, each offering an EPA-rated range of more than 300 miles.

Production of EX60 models bound for the US started in April. Shoppers can now configure the P6 and P10 versions that will arrive at dealers this summer, with the P12 following “soon after that.” Prices will start at $59,795 for the base P6 Plus version and go up to more than $68,745 for a P10 AWD Ultra model, which has a longer range, more power, and more standard equipment.

The low-end model is pricier than its XC60 Plus gasoline counterpart ($55,595), but less expensive than the plug-in hybrid version of the XC60 ($63,940). The P12 with more power and range hasn’t been priced yet. An EX60 Cross Country model, using the P10 or P12 powertrains, is already available in Europe, so it’ll undoubtedly come to the US as well.

Among European luxury brands, the EX60 competes with the BMW iX3 ($62,850 and up) and the soon-to-arrive Mercedes-Benz GLC EV. There’s also the Tesla Model Y, which starts as low as $42K or so—though Tesla prices change so often you should check the current number yourself.

We drove both a P6 RWD and a P10 AWD model in Barcelona and the hilly regions outside the city, both in the top-of-the-line Ultra trim. It proved a very competent EV SUV that we think will appeal strongly to Volvo buyers. It may also bring new buyers into the brand. That could help Volvo, which had a rough year in which it had to cope with new tariffs on auto imports, the end of the federal EV purchase incentive, and withdrawing its least expensive EV model, the EX30.

Photos by John Voelcker.

Recognizably Volvo, more avant-garde

From the outside, the EX60 is still recognizably a Volvo SUV—or perhaps a tall wagon, if you squint. But it has crisper and harder-edged lines than the Volvo XC60 gasoline model it parallels. It’s the next step in Volvo’s evolved design language first seen on the larger EX90, especially at the rear.

The front is obviously Volvo, with a flat panel where the grille would be that includes a prominent “ironmark,” as the Volvo circle-with-an-arrow is known. At the back end, however, Volvo’s signature outboard vertical lights reappear. A single vertical corner taillight is the most obvious rear element, but the lights above the beltline in thin vertical segments are all but hidden in black trim until they illuminate.

Inside, the EX60 continues the brand’s traditional Scandinavian modern theme, with a more tech-forward look. It has fewer switches and hard controls, a 15.0-inch central screen for the majority of vehicle controls, and an 11.4-inch digital display cluster for the driver just at the base of the windshield.

Photos by Volvo.

Power, or more power

The P6 rear-wheel-drive model we drove first is the least powerful EX60 that’ll be sold in the US. With a single 275-kilowatt (369-horsepower) motor at the rear, it’s still more than capable of keeping up with Spanish traffic—and, we suspect, traffic in affluent US suburbs and on our highways. Volvo says it’ll accelerate from 0 to 60 mph in 5.7 seconds; we call that entirely sufficient.

The more powerful P10 AWD has front and rear motors whose output totals 375 kW (503 hp). Volvo quotes 0 to 60 mph in 4.4 seconds for this one. EPA-rated ranges are 307 miles combined for the P6 and 322 for the P10 when each is on 20-inch or 21-inch tires, but the top-end 22-inch tires cut range to 295 and 312 miles respectively. Then there’s the P12, with 400 miles of range on 20-inch tires—and less for the larger wheels.

Regenerative braking felt stronger in the P10, with a second motor to recharge the battery, but in either model it was easily learned and almost intuitive to drive. By this point, Volvo has had a lot of time to tune its acceleration and regen algorithms, and it took all of 90 seconds before they were second nature—the mark of experienced EV designers.

On-road handling and roadholding was similarly predictable, with both models of the EX60 easy to place, even in the twisting curves of the hill country outside Barcelona. Far more wieldy than the large and heavy EX90, the new midsize EV weighs 4,660 to 5,140 pounds, relatively svelte among midsize EVs with 300-plus miles of range.

What’s listed as the “One-pedal drive” setting might better be called “Strong Regen,” since it won’t take the car to a complete stop. The driver still has to step in and brake for the last 6 mph or so, though it will hold the car once stopped if idle creep is turned off. Drivers who prefer to mimic the behavior of a gasoline vehicle with automatic transmission can keep idle creep on, of course. The Auto setting lets the car glide under certain conditions, to minimize energy use, and works with the adaptive cruise control to recapture energy while slowing.

The charge port door is located on the right rear corner, with a lid that flips upward to shield the plug port from rain or snow, a nice touch. While our European model had a CCS-2 port, all North American vehicles will be fitted with a NACS (Tesla) port. The onboard AC charger is rated at 19.2 kW, while Volvo says the EX60 can DC fast-charge from 10 to 80 percent at up to 350 kW, giving a charging time as low as 16 minutes under ideal circumstances.

Cell-to-pack battery, one megacasting

The larger EX90 sat on what Volvo dubbed its SPA2 platform, standing for Scalable Product Architecture (SPA1 was the original XC90 of 2016). Just two years later, the EX60 rides on SPA3, with several advances: a cell-to-pack battery that forgoes the use of modules to hold the cells altogether and serves as the cabin floor. It also uses Volvo’s first-ever megacasting and a more powerful central processor, called HuginCore, that it developed to allow future safety and feature expansions via over-the-air updates.

The cell-to-pack design of the EX60 battery arrays the cells vertically, in closely spaced rows with a thick layer of insulation on both sides of each cell to prevent failure in an individual cell from propagating to its neighbor. The P6 and P10 each use the same nickel-based cells, from Sunwoda, with the 95 kilowatt-hour capacity (91 kWh usable) of the P10 filling the case entirely, while the P6 eliminates a few rows of cells at the back of the pack for its lower 83 kWh capacity (80 kWh usable). The P12 has different, more energy dense cells using a higher nickel content supplied by CATL—which also fill the pack—for a higher capacity of 117 kWh (112 kWh usable).

Eliminating modules has been one emerging technology trend among recent EV designs; another is the use of large single castings to replace complex structures made up of dozens or hundreds of smaller steel stampings that need to be welded together. Volvo is using only one mega-casting in the EX60; it forms the rear chassis section of the vehicle behind the back of the battery pack, carries the rear suspension, and absorbs crash loads from rear collisions.

Asked why Volvo hadn’t done two such castings, adding one for the front section as well—as Ford has done for its Universal Electric Vehicle platform that will underlie an upcoming $30,000 midsize electric pickup and other models—chief engineering and technology officer Anders Bell told Charged there were several reasons.

First, it wanted to get experience with large castings: walk before you run. Second, a front structure is more complex to the greater needs for energy dissipation in frontal crashes, so more computer modeling and physical testing is required. Finally, the substantial need for machining the finished casting to mount other components suggested there would be no net cost savings. The goal, he said, is to create castings that can be assembled “as cast”—without any further machining—and Volvo isn’t there yet.

Comfortable, smooth … and still screen-based

The EX60 seats four adults in comfort, and a fifth passenger in the center rear will find the flat floor a pleasant feature. All occupants sit slightly more knees-up than they would in, say, an XC60, but that’s an unavoidable consequence of having several inches of battery pack underfoot. The top of the battery pack is actually the floor of the car, with a large hole in the body shell. Its complex sill structures are split between the rails along the edges of the pack and the sheet metal below each door.

Cargo volume is 20.4 cubic feet with the rear seat up and 58.2 cubic feet with the second row folded down. There’s also a 3-cubic-foot front trunk. The tailgate includes Volvo’s “Will It Fit?” graphic, but the European versions we drove had one feature we’d never seen. That was a bucket with the image of a crab stamped into it, in a compartment under the rear load deck—used to bring home your catch from a day of crabbing at the beach, apparently a popular Swedish hobby. That bucket seems unlikely to make it to North America, however.

Like the EX90, the midsize Volvo EV is unlocked and started via the user’s mobile phone. For those who prefer not to have to carry their phone to drive their car, a key card will be standard as well. Want a traditional fob? One will be available as an extra-cost option.

Behind the wheel, most controls are done through the center screen, including steering-wheel and door-mirror positioning. That’s fine, since each phone unlock will identify the user’s presets to the car. Less ideal is the need to go into the center screen to reposition the air vents—a perennial irritation for drivers who want a lot of hot or cold air to start, then less as the cabin warms or cools. Yes, the car can be preconditioned. But attempting to adjust vent positions on a center screen at speed is a bad and dangerous idea.

Quiet and peaceful

The EX60 is an extremely quiet and peaceful car to ride in. At least on Spanish road surfaces, we head very little tire noise, and only occasional wind noise from the door mirrors. It was easy to drive, produced little stress under any circumstance, and was clearly more maneuverable than the EX90 we drove two years ago—without that car’s regrettable bugs. It’s the kind of car we can see in growing numbers of affluent suburban driveways.

All EX60s are assembled at the company’s main production plant at Torslanda, just outside its headquarters in Gothenburg, Sweden. That makes them presently subject to the newly raised 25-percent tariff on vehicles imported from Europe, though since Volvo also exports cars from its plant in Ridgeville, South Carolina, it can offset some amount of those. One final note: The mandatory delivery fee (included in all prices cited) is $1,395—very reasonable these days, when carmakers have boosted such fees to $1,500, $2,000, or even more for higher-end models.

Volvo’s not yet done with its modern EV lineup. But overall, the 2027 Volvo EX60 ticked pretty much every box for a premium or luxury midsize crossover utility EV with 300 to 400 miles of range. We suspect it will prove attractive to some of today’s XC60 buyers who are willing to take the plunge and go battery-electric.


Volvo provided airfare, lodging, and meals to enable Charged to bring you this first-person drive report.



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Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Moment Energy earns UL 60730-1 functional safety certification for a second-life EV battery BMS


Moment Energy has achieved UL 60730-1 functional safety certification for a battery management system designed specifically for repurposed EV batteries, completing what the Austin-based company describes as the full UL safety stack for second-life storage.

The certification addresses the specific friction that has slowed second-life battery deployments in commercial and industrial settings: proving to insurers, permitting authorities and utilities that a system built from retired EV batteries meets the same independently verified safety standards as purpose-built storage. UL 60730-1 covers functional safety for automatic electrical controls; applying it to a second-life BMS is the missing piece. Moment already held UL 1974 (repurposed battery evaluation), UL 1973 (stationary battery applications), and UL 9540 (energy storage systems). The 60730-1 closes the loop at the BMS control layer.

Moment’s approach differs from the common industry workaround of reverse-engineering the original automotive BMS. Its proprietary BMS is purpose-built to manage repurposed cells for stationary performance and safety while respecting automotive partner IP — a distinction that matters both technically and commercially as Moment works with OEMs including Mercedes-Benz Energy.

“This certification proves that with the right technology, repurposed batteries can match purpose-built storage on safety, reliability, and performance,” said Gabe Soares, Co-Founder and CTO at Moment Energy. “It gives customers, battery OEMs, automakers, utilities, and regulators the confidence to deploy repurposed EV batteries in critical infrastructure without compromise.”

The company’s systems are deployed in data centers, hospitals, factories, and microgrids across North America, manufactured in Texas and British Columbia. The certification also provides a certified safety boundary for Moment’s AI and machine-learning optimization capabilities.

Source: Moment Energy



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Roam to deploy EV charging at Hand Picked Hotels’ luxury country house properties


Roam Charging has secured a contract to deploy EV charging infrastructure across Hand Picked Hotels’ portfolio of luxury country house hotels and coastal resorts.

Roam will install and operate 112 EV charge points across 20 of Hand Picked Hotels’ UK properties. Roam will manage the full lifecycle of the installations, including design, deployment and ongoing maintenance.

The 20 distinctive hotels are located at historic estates and scenic countryside locations across the UK and the Channel Islands. Roam’s EV charging stations will provide destination charging for overnight guests.

“This partnership with Hand Picked Hotels is a natural fit. Their portfolio of unique high-quality destinations across the UK and Channel Islands offers exactly the kind of dwell-time environment where EV charging adds real value,” said James Randall, CEO of Roam Charging. “Together we’re enabling guests to travel more sustainably without compromising on comfort or experience.”

Source: Roam



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Monday, May 18, 2026

For electric trucks, “the math is simple,” says Chinese heavy machinery OEM


Electric trucks have passed an inflection point—in many cases, their total cost of ownership is lower than that of legacy trucks. But for a fleet operator, evaluating the economic case for electrification involves some complex calculations involving fuel costs, projected maintenance costs, duty cycles, CapEx vs Opex, etc.

Or does it? Michael Yue, General Manager of the truck business unit at Chinese machinery giant Sany Heavy Industry, offers a simple equation: In any locale where it costs at least ten times as much to buy one liter of diesel as to buy one kilowatt-hour of electricity, an electric truck will pay off its additional purchase cost in 12 to 14 months—a timeframe that makes electrification a no-brainer for truck operators.

Mr. Yue probably knows whereof he speaks—in China, around 11% of heavy long-distance trucks and 20% of smaller commercial vehicles sold over the past year were battery-electric. Sany, facing sagging demand from China’s domestic construction industry, is aggressively seeking overseas sales, and the relationship between local diesel and electricity prices is a major factor in deciding which markets to target.

Bloomberg’s David Fickling has done some further calculations, and reports that countries accounting for about 40% of global diesel demand currently meet that ten-times multiple. Even looking at average 2025 diesel prices, he finds that more than a third of the world’s diesel is burned in countries where it costs at least nine times more than equivalent units of electricity. By 2030, BloombergNEF predicts that the EVs-outcompete-diesel multiple will shrink to four times the cost. If and when that comes to pass, even petrostates such as Saudi Arabia will find battery-electric trucks to be cheaper.

Many of Sany’s potential customers are in Europe, where stringent fuel economy rules are supporting electric truck sales. But looking at the electricity-vs-diesel cost curve explains why the company is also seeing strong interest from operators in South Africa, Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand.

A trend is becoming clear: the smaller auto and truck markets typically lumped together as “Rest of World” by the media are likely to leapfrog the US and Europe, and electrify much sooner.

Source: Bloomberg



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Monomyth Materials acquires NanoGraf to pair SiOx silicon anodes with its domestic synthetic graphite platform


Monomyth Materials has acquired the assets of NanoGraf, a Chicago-based silicon anode company spun out of Northwestern University and Argonne National Laboratory, pairing SiOx technology and a defense-validated IP portfolio with its domestic synthetic graphite business. Financial terms weren’t disclosed.

The NanoGraf assets become the foundation of a new subsidiary, M2Innovations, focused on advanced battery materials and prototype cell development from R&D through pilot scale. It sits alongside M2Graphite—Monomyth’s synthetic graphite business, simultaneously rebranded from Anovion Technologies—which handles commercial-scale production. The combination covers essentially the full active anode stack: graphite and silicon together make up virtually all of the active material in a lithium-ion anode, and both are currently dominated by Chinese supply.

Over 90% of active anode material is sourced from China today, and China accounts for more than 60% of global SiOx capacity. NanoGraf’s SiOx technology is already deployed in consumer electronics and military applications, with validation from federal defense and energy agencies, including the Department of Energy.

M2Graphite was assembled from graphite assets formerly held by Amsted Industries and Pyrotek. Amsted remains a minority shareholder. The Bainbridge, Georgia site is slated to be the first of several facilities, backed by three planned capital programs of more than $1 billion each. Monomyth has invested more than $100 million in the platform since 2022.

Francis Wang, who led NanoGraf through its growth stage, will join the M2Innovations advisory board.

Source: Monomyth Materials



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Friday, May 15, 2026

Why integrated FPC-based cell contact solutions are essential to battery pack manufacturing


Increased battery density is the endgame of all cutting-edge battery design, improvements cannot come at the expense of safety or cost limitations. The question then becomes how to push the envelope in a safe and cost-effective way. Monitoring the state-of-health of cells is at the top of the list of considerations.

Accurately measuring ambient factors like temperature and voltage provides critical data to the BMS. For years, this could be done through discreet wiring, though this method was inefficient, and the quality was lacking. In today’s designs, flexible printed circuit boards (FPCs) are replacing discrete wiring. These FPC-based systems are the newest generation of cell contacting systems. They simultaneously bring down the cost of pack manufacturing and improve reliability in manufacturing and data harnessing.

The quality of data is essential in order to safely maximize energy density. This white paper from Churod Electronics details the hows and whys of FPC-based Cell Contacting Systems and how this cost-effective, yet reliable tool is a key to modern battery pack efficiency.



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ChargeLab and ChargerHelp form strategic partnership to maximize EV charger uptime

ChargerHelp’s mission is to improve the parlous state of public EV charging reliability. The company offers a Reliability as a Service cont...