September sees sustained growth in EV sales

ChargeUK calls on UK Government to address high cost of public charging

By
Zapmap
Published

A report released today by ChargeUK lays out key demands to ensure that the cost of public charging does not become a restrictive factor in EV adoption. The report calls upon the government to take action on increased standing and fuel costs for charge point operators, which put at a disadvantage those EV drivers without home charging, and risk impeding future uptake.


Delivering Affordable Charging for All’ outlines a three -point plan for policymakers to enable all drivers to charge affordably:

  1. Tackle operators’ prohibitively high energy costs
  • Accelerate existing regulatory reforms to bring down the high cost of standing charges
  • Extend policy levy exemptions to the charging sector, as for other strategic sectors, ahead of planned increases
  1. Boost the charging business case
  • Add EV charging to the existing Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation scheme, costing the government nothing while generating operator revenues that would support deployment and help keep consumer prices competitive
  1. Eliminate the VAT penalty on public charging
  • Bring VAT on public charging down to 5%, in line with home charging, addressing the current disparity, which costs drivers who cannot charge at home an additional £145 a year

 

Vicky Read, CEO of ChargeUK, said, 

“If the Government wishes to ensure that cost of charging does not become a barrier to millions more drivers switching to EVs, it needs to take action – to tackle sky-high energy costs, to address the VAT penalty and to introduce EV charging to its existing renewable fuel credit scheme.”

“The EV transition is well underway, with a quarter of all new cars sold an EV, and the public charging network hitting 85,000 charge points this month. Most drivers can already charge affordably, and the charging sector is innovating to offer additional ways to access cost-effective options. But the public charging sector has been hit by a series of policy and regulatory decisions that have caused our own costs to soar, with an unavoidable impact on some driver prices.”

The charging sector is playing a vital role in supporting the UK’s EV drivers, investing £6bn to grow the public network by around 30% a year. Most drivers can already charge cost-effectively using a blend of home and public charge points. However public charging prices having risen by 38% on average since 2021, impacting those who cannot easily access home charging.

ChargeUK’s new white paper draws on independent analysis by Cornwall Insight to show that a sharp increase in operators’ underlying energy costs (both wholesale energy and fixed charges) is the main cause of average price increases.

 

ChargeUK CEO Vicky Read added, 

“Our members are committed to ensuring that all drivers can charge affordably across the mix of charging options available to them. So today we are setting out three deliverable actions for government, which address or compensate for high and rising costs that are outside our control.

The new white paper, drawing on Cornwall Insight analysis, demonstrates that average price increases since 2021 have largely been driven by very significant increases in the sector’s underlying energy costs.

 

Wholesale energy prices

Along with other UK businesses, Charge Point Operators (CPOs) continue to be exposed to very high wholesale electricity prices, which remain 66% higher than pre-Energy Crisis levels.

However, the sector has also been hit uniquely by substantial cost increases following Ofgem’s Targeted Charging Review in 2023 which changed how other elements of the sector’s energy bills are calculated. As a result, standing charges have risen by up to 462% at rapid and ultra-rapid charging sites, and now represent up to 70% of total energy costs, compared to around 15% for comparable businesses. Charge Point Operators of slow and fast charge points have also been hit by a 389% increase in standing charges.

CPOs also face a heavy and growing burden from government policy levies, which are applied to every unit of electricity consumed. These levies, including the Climate Change Levy, currently add approximately 6p/kWh to CPOs’ bills, despite the fact that the sector is playing a vital role in the decarbonisation of transport, and are set to increase by more than 10% by 2030

Finally, drivers using public charging infrastructure are subject to VAT at the higher 20% rate, compared to VAT at 5% for home charging, creating unfair additional costs for the one in three households without access to home charging.

Cornwall Insight’s analysis reveals that it is these elevated energy costs, combined with the Government’s continued policy of charging VAT on public charging at 20% (versus 5% for home charging), that has put upward pressure on public charging prices.