Thursday, April 16, 2026

EV charger manufacturer XCharge opens a new assembly facility in Spain


XCharge North America, a provider of battery-integrated EV charging solutions, has announced its first European assembly plant in Valencia, Spain.

The 3,000-square-meter Valencia plant will serve as a primary assembly and testing center for XCharge’s most advanced hardware, including the C7 charger, which delivers up to 400 kW power at 600 A; and GridLink, a “low-input, high-output” solution that can supply nearly 200 kW of power with only 44 kW of grid input.

The facility will directly benefit XCharge’s North American operations by diversifying the company’s global supply chain, the company says.

“The new Silla plant represents a major step forward in XCharge’s expansion in Spain and reinforces our commitment to a more efficient and sustainable European supply chain,” said Aatish Patel, President and co-founder of XCharge North America. “This facility reflects our vision of building a stronger value chain founded on engineering excellence, continuous innovation, and a long-term commitment to the energy transition. Europe is central to that vision and stands as a cornerstone of our global business.”

Source: XCharge



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ETA Green Power launches ETA-MODEL 20, a 13.5 kg integrated motor, controller and charger for light EVs


ETA Green Power has launched the ETA-MODEL 20, a 3-in-1 integrated electric powertrain combining motor, controller and onboard charger in a single unit targeting vehicles with gross vehicle weights from 300 kg to 2,500 kg.

The system weighs 13.5 kg—a 32.5% reduction compared to conventional systems, which the company says typically reach up to 20 kg. Volume is approximately 20% smaller. ETA Green Power claims 92% peak system efficiency, a top motor speed of 10,000 rpm and up to 37% gradeability at gross vehicle weight. The unit is IP67-rated.

Integrating motor, controller and charger eliminates inter-component wiring, reduces thermal losses and condenses supplier relationships to a single system. ETA Green Power says the architecture results in 20% lower overall vehicle-level costs and improved reliability. The company also says the ETA-MODEL 20 uses no heavy rare earth elements—specifically no terbium or dysprosium—reducing exposure to supply chain disruptions tied to those materials.

“By reducing complexity while increasing performance, we are enabling our partners to accelerate time-to-market and deliver better vehicles to their customers,” said Alex Bamberg.

The system is designed in the UK and manufactured in India. ETA Green Power says it is currently in a funding round to support growth and global expansion.

Source: ETA Green Power



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Walmart is rolling out its in-house DC fast charging network at a rapid pace


Mega-retailer Walmart has had EV charging stations at its stores for years—thousands of DC fast chargers from public charging providers (chiefly Electrify America) grace its spacious parking lots.

The company decided to develop its own in-house (or “in-lot?”) network in 2023, and it isn’t losing any time. The first Walmart-branded chargers went online last year, and (according to the DOE’s Alternative Fuels Data Center) Walmart now has 31 DC fast charging stations with a total of 112 individual dispensers.

The company installs exclusively 400-kilowatt chargers from manufacturers Alpitronic and ABB. Each stall is fitted with an NACS and a CCS1 port.

Walmart hasn’t been talking to the press much about its EV charging network, so a lot of details are still unknown—but the firm said last year that it planned to install fast chargers at “thousands of its locations by 2030.”

Currently, the state of Texas has the most Walmart EV charging stations, with 15. Arizona has 6, Florida has 3, and Oklahoma has 2.

Walmart is bucking the trend toward installing credit card readers—drivers need to use the store’s smartphone app. Pricing varies from one location to another, but the average price as of this writing is a middling $0.48/kWh.

Source: InsideEVs



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4R Battery Alliance calls for EV battery testing to be part of the UK’s MOT testing regime


The 4R Battery Alliance is a coalition of stakeholders from across the EV battery supply chain, supported by recell.store, an online marketplace for used EV batteries.

The coalition works to increase awareness of battery health issues, and is advocating for the introduction of EV battery testing into the UK’s MoT testing regime.

In the UK, every vehicle must pass a series of safety tests each year (after its third year of life), a hallowed process familiarly known as an MOT (for Ministry of Transport).

New MOT rules introduced this year added additional safety checks for EVs, including visual inspections of high-voltage cabling and visible battery mountings. However, battery testing is still not part of the testing regime.

By helping detect safety issues, testing would reduce the chances of battery fires and failures, as well as identifying degradation patterns and optimal charging strategies, says the Alliance.

Testing would promote the 4R Battery Alliance’s namesake “four Rs” of battery stewardship: Repair, Reuse, Repurpose and Recycle. Improved visibility into battery condition could help identify batteries suitable for repair, reuse or repurposing into second-life applications—as well as those that have reached the end of their useful lives and are headed for the recycling center.

Testing would also support the used EV market, 4R says, by giving buyers more information about battery condition. Uncertainty over battery health is often cited as a barrier to purchasing a used EV. By providing clear, reliable insights into the condition and performance of the battery, an independently applied test would build confidence, supporting a healthier used EV market.

“EV battery testing is one of the key enablers of a circular economy. Without it, we can’t confidently reuse, repurpose or recycle batteries at scale,” said Tom Rumboll, Chair of the 4R Battery Alliance. “We see this as part of a broader, industry-wide effort to normalize battery diagnostics and make them an integral part of EV ownership.”

Source: 4R Battery Alliance



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Wednesday, April 15, 2026

A modern-day Luther nails 12 theses to auto dealership door, demanding that they sell EVs


Is the car dealership model comparable to the medieval Catholic church? In both cases, doctrine holds that an individual cannot attain salvation (spiritual or automotive) directly, but requires the mediation of an extremely powerful, legally sanctioned and historically hidebound organization.

In a satirical piece written for CleanTechnica, Michael Barnard has (figuratively) nailed a set of 12 (mercifully, not 95) theses to the door of the auto dealership establishment. He argues that the dealers’ traditional liturgy of high-ball/low-ball haggling, hidden fees, trade-ins and back-office conferences is as dated as the medieval world of relics, Latin masses and indulgences.

In the internal combustion era, he writes, the dealership model made sense, as cars required regular maintenance and service, and buyers depended on dealerships for product information. “The priesthood existed for a reason.”

However, just as the spread of printed Bibles enabled believers to read the word of God for themselves, today’s auto buyers research vehicles online, and often arrive at a dealership knowing more about EVs than the sales staff.  

In Barnard’s automotive reformation, Tesla played the part of Martin Luther, Rivian represents “a slightly upscale Protestant sect with good branding and better hiking boots,” and Lucid seems like “a high church reformer.”

Of course, the medieval Church wasn’t all bad—it supported education, the arts and beer-brewing, among other good deeds—and the Reformation did not shut it down.

Auto dealerships do provide valuable services—facilitating trade-ins, financing and warranty work, and providing “a human being in town who can be yelled at when something goes wrong”—and they aren’t going away. Tesla operates dozens of brick-and-mortar stores, and Chinese wrecking ball BYD recently announced plans to open 20 dealerships in Canada.

No, the dealership war is about whether automakers can operate their own dealerships, as opposed to the franchise model required by law in most US states.

Over the years, EV-makers have won the right to sell directly in a majority of states. In many cases, state governments have carved out exceptions to the franchise requirement for EV-only brands. A recently-passed law in Washington state grants the right to sell directly only to automakers that sell exclusively battery-electric vehicles, and that have never had any franchised dealers (to wit, Tesla, Rivian and Lucid).

If the dealers believed that this is as far as reform will go, they wouldn’t be complaining—Crazy Cal and his pals have no interest in selling Teslas or Rivians. No, what they fear is that the Fords and GMs of the world will acquire a taste for running their own dealerships, cutting out (or rather, co-opting) the middleman.

Could this day of reckoning be drawing nigh? A group of dealerships recently sued Volkswagen over plans to sell Scout plug-in vehicles directly to consumers. A year earlier, a Scout exec said that he was “highly confident” that the company would win the right to sell directly. Note that Scout does not sell only battery EVs, and that it is indisputably a part of VW.

The Reformation was followed by a Counter-Reformation, and a century or two of religious wars. The electrification revolution has only begun, and over the coming decades it will remake not only retail auto sales, but every aspect of our transportation and energy systems.

Source: CleanTechnica



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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Port of Los Angeles reduces costs and dwell times with electric terminal trucks


Port facilities are prime candidates for electrification—plugging in vehicles and equipment can deliver not only major cost savings, but outsized emissions reductions, as various studies have quantified.

APM Terminals has been steadily electrifying its operations at the Port of Los Angeles for years. The company’s EV fleet now includes 36 electric cars and trucks, 3 electric straddle carriers, 9 HD electric forklifts and telehandlers, and 22 electric terminal tractors, including 20 from Orange EV. Some 51 EV charging stations provide power.

As expected, the company has substantially reduced its fuel and maintenance costs. Electrification has also brought an unexpected benefit—increased uptime and improved truck and cargo flow has enabled the container port to reduce truck dwell times from an average of 90 minutes to 35.

“I was a little skeptical at the start. How one could move from low 60s percentage reliability to 90, and do it consistently?” said Jon Poelma, Managing Director, APM Terminals, Los Angeles. “But I think we can all see from the data that it is happening.”

APM’s ship-to-shore cranes at the port run on grid electricity, and shore power is also available for the ships that dock.

“The cranes are all plugged in—not every terminal in the world has cranes that are plugged in,” adds Poelma. “Also, I would say 97% of the ships that came into Pier 400 last year got plugged in to shore power.”

Source: Electrek



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Monday, April 13, 2026

Gotion and partners launch Europe-Africa electric logistics corridor


China-headquartered battery manufacturer Gotion has partnered with Green Power Morocco (GPM) and Chery Heavy Trucks to develop a heavy-duty electric logistics corridor between Morocco and France, advancing low-emission cross-continental freight transport.

The 2,000-km route, which runs from Agadir (southern Morocco) through the Port of Tangier to Perpignan (southern France), is currently traveled by some 2,000 heavy trucks daily. The partners will phase in electric trucks and supporting charging infrastructure along this key trade artery.

Gotion and GPM will form a joint venture to manage electric fleets, battery-swapping stations, smart dispatching and energy storage. Initial deployment plans include 100 heavy-duty electric trucks equipped with Gotion battery systems. Chery will bring commercial vehicle engineering and manufacturing capabilities to the table.

A battery-swapping solution is under development to minimize downtime and improve operational efficiency for heavy-duty trucks, supported by work on battery standardization and lifecycle management.

The project combines electrification, energy infrastructure, and digital logistics to create a scalable model for reducing freight emissions.

“This cooperation combines Gotion’s battery technology with Chery’s manufacturing to tailor electric logistics solutions for regional needs,” said Phil Jenkins, CEO of GPM Holding. “Morocco’s logistics sector holds strong long-term potential.”

Source: Gotion High-Tech



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EV charger manufacturer XCharge opens a new assembly facility in Spain

XCharge North America , a provider of battery-integrated EV charging solutions, has announced its first European assembly plant in Valencia...