battery storage, charging stations, damen, dc systems, dens, dynniq, elaadnl, electric trucks, fier, firan, fluidwell, fontys, heliox, kema labs, maxem, niederlande, prodrive, recoy, rocsys, scholt energy, shell, shell recharge, subsidies, sycada, tsn groen, tu eindhoven, van berkel, van kessel, xyz dynamics, dutch gov’ funds charging energy hubs for heavy-duty evs

Anticipating future demands of high-power charging, a new project is to prepare grid-sensitive infrastructure for heavy-duty EVs across Europe. With 20 proposals to select from, the Dutch government is funding a consortium to establish ‘Charging Energy Hubs’ in the country. Working with Heliox and internal documents, we unearth the details and find concrete real-world applications in the making.

***

Twenty-nine partners, mostly Dutch companies with global ambitions, such as Shell, DAF, or Rocsys in robotics, have set out to manage the growing energy demand from high-power charging, expected to multiply once commercial electric vehicles join the increasing number of electric cars on the roads.

It is an issue not only the Dutch grid will have to address sooner or later – truck charging hubs at a megawatt-scale are becoming a tentative trend across the industry advanced by policies. The US state of Michigan released 13 million dollars for a “truck stop of the future” with Daimler in North America. Norway’s economic development agency Enova launched a subsidy scheme to build charging stations for heavy-duty EVs in the country this July, and these are just the most recent examples.

Although Norway is renowned as a pioneer in electric car adoption, Enova says there is “barely developed infrastructure” for charging heavy vehicles. The same may be said for Europe and the Netherlands, where this matter is becoming pressing, as cities and regions are working towards not only ultra-low but zero-emission zones within the next two years (and not only in 2030 or later).

“From 2025, at least 30 cities must have established a zero-emission zone as per their commitment to the Paris Climate Accord,” Heliox pointed out in 2021 when introducing the Flex Charge system for fleet operators.

There will be more on technology transfer later. For now, Heliox and the partners in the consortium expect electric transport to “exponentially increase”, and with it will the demand for HPC infrastructure. To address this challenge, the project envisions “an efficient use of smart energy systems to maximise grid efficiency through smart energy solutions,” writes Heliox.

Cue in the ‘Charging Energy Hubs’ now funded through 320 million euros from the Dutch National Growth Fund. Heliox could not disclose the total budget but told electrive.com that the project would run for four years, starting from 1 January 2024 until the end of 2027.

Michael Colijn, the Heliox CEO, said they were thrilled to receive the support and called the Netherlands “a powerhouse in the logistics and eMobility sector”.

The consortium unites entities from all sectors and science, which contribute access to sites, vehicles, hardware, software, energy management and knowledge. The set-up assumes cooperation among stakeholders in the value chain as “crucial,” so Colijn.

Heliox ultimately expects the hubs to result in a “decentralised and vital link” between electricity consumers and suppliers.

What do Charging Energy Hubs look like?

A press photo gives a more detailed impression of the partners and their involvement.

battery storage, charging stations, damen, dc systems, dens, dynniq, elaadnl, electric trucks, fier, firan, fluidwell, fontys, heliox, kema labs, maxem, niederlande, prodrive, recoy, rocsys, scholt energy, shell, shell recharge, subsidies, sycada, tsn groen, tu eindhoven, van berkel, van kessel, xyz dynamics, dutch gov’ funds charging energy hubs for heavy-duty evs

At the core of the new hubs will be charging infrastructure by Heliox and power electronics by AME. In future, robots will charge the vehicles with automation delivered by Rocsys and ProDrive. Rocsys has been working on robotic charging equipment for a few years and is part of projects involving heavy-duty EVs in the US.

Back in Europe, regarding energy supply, stationery batteries on-site are to come through Dens or DAF, with the latter also signing responsible for electrified vehicles. Dynniq and DC Systems are to realise the planned local microgrid (DC), which will prove central to the hubs in a bit.

The resulting structure will then allow flexibility during peak demand or grid balancing issues, so Heliox, and it appears that the consortium has commercial users in mind looking at the sheer size and megawatt charging.

Indeed, in a document describing the proposal in more depth than the press release, the Dutch authorities consider it “likely that a large part of the benefits will be private” due to the high investment costs implied. The public intervention was only legitimate “if the private co-financing is aligned with the likely expected private benefits from the project,” continues the Dutch central planning authority, Centraal Planbureau.

Heliox, when asked about the public or private/commercial nature of the projects, told electrive.com that two of the envisioned Charging Energy Hubs would be private, another open to the public.

Consortium builds on technology transfer

Heliox has rolled out large charging depots for commercial operations before. Starting in 2017 in Eindhoven, Amsterdam became one of Europe’s largest bus charging hubs two years later until FirstBus opened an even larger depot in Glasgow in 2022, targeting to charge up to 300 buses. In these cases, Heliox delivered the smart charging software and hardware and has since recreated similar models in Den Bosch, Netherlands, and Montgomery County, Maryland, USA.

In Scotland, however, the operator made the unusual step of opening the depot for registered fleet partners to charge their vehicles during the day when the buses are out of service. This year, FirstBus opened another site to the public in Cornwall, again with Heliox equipment.

The equipment installed at the depots relies on technology Heliox debuted in 2019 when it prepared a battery-supported opportunity charging station called SprintCharge. Charging via pantograph is backed up by a stationary battery to boost ultra-rapid charges without disrupting the grid.

Wondering whether Heliox will use this technology for the new Charging Energy Hubs, sources involved in the project told us that “Yes, the basic concepts developed in SprintCharge will be re-used in a new configuration”.

Moreover, the company confirmed that its FlexCharge concept, developed for fleets, would be part of WP8, a term that first emerged in our research in government files.

How concrete are the Energy Charge Hubs?

While the original press information only introduced the concept, the document issued by Central Planbureau revealed details. According to the file, the consortium has already defined eight work packages in depth.

The first of these (WP 1 – 3) deals with hardware development, and the consortium targets developing bidirectional inverters to couple the different power sources and users. Power, for example, from a battery can be supplied to the grid.

Moreover, Heliox said in a reply to electrive.com, that the consortium was working on megawatt-scale DC/DC interlink converters for site-to-site coupling of the DC microgrid as well as AC/DC converters between the grid and the local microgrid. To charge heavy-duty EVs on the DC microgrid, there will be other DC/DC converters for the coupling.

This also means the hubs will not be islands. Heliox said the installation would connect to the medium-voltage AC grid and revealed plans for local wind generation on a 10+ MW scale when talking to electrive.com. In future, there may be the integration of PV and BESS-connected DC/DC converters to feed and buffer the DC micro-grid, Heliox added.

The DC microgrids mentioned before will therefore include local power sources such as solar panels, wind turbines or batteries and supply the charging stations without interfering with the medium-voltage grid. The advantage is that the power does not have to be converted from direct to alternating current, reducing conversion losses, so the document.

Regarding software, the proposal sees the optimisation of the Charging Energy Hubs as a primary task in WP 4 and 5. The resulting software is to take into account the logistics, charging profiles, local energy sources and flexible assets, such as batteries and grid capacity. “The ultimate goal is that participating parties can manage the local power grid themselves through software with linked assets being flexibly controlled to match energy supply and demand,” so the file.

Heliox also mentions the integration of site-to-site MID energy metering for mutual financial transactions based on energy exchange. This aligns with its partnership with Recoy, announced last summer, to fine-tune the vehicle-to-x offerings to include energy prices. And sure enough, Recoy is also listed among the consortium partners. Other partners will deliver fleet, energy management and trading platforms, simulations for system analysis and contribute additional research and knowledge development.

Partners will realise three hubs for different use cases

Most notable are work packages 6 – 8, which specify three use cases in line with the above developments.

According to this, WP 6 tests automatic charging and optimisation software at a private company focused on urban logistics.

WP 7 focuses on a publicly accessible “truck charging plaza, ” including the DC microgrid, automatic high-power charging points, and optimised software. Shell has confirmed its involvement in the said site and told electrive.com, “The proof of the pudding is in the eating”. The corporation added that it would “use this location to learn and to create a replicable blueprint,” allowing Shell “to roll out more hubs within the current grid limitations”.

Lastly, WP 8 is to be a full-scale Charging Energy Hub at a business park, including all of the above technologies alongside transportable battery systems and integration of connected networks on the route. As this work package will apply FlexCharge technology, the hub will support high-powered overnight charging across multiple vehicles and a likely layout in 180 and 360 kW. The nominal DC output of 180 kW allows vehicles to be charged either one after the other in sequential charging mode at 180 kW – or three vehicles in parallel at 60 kW each. The output voltage is between 200 and 1,000 volts, and the rated output current is 3×80 amps. Depending on the application, the Flex can then be combined with CCS-1, CCS-2 or automated Panto-Up or Panto-Down solutions.

Heliox said it could not disclose further details “just yet” but confirmed it expects building works to start in 2025.

The Energy Charging Hub consortium comprises the following partners: AME, DAF, DAMEN, DC Systems, DENS, Dynniq, FIER, Firan, Fontys, HAN, Heliox, Fluidwell, KEMA, Maxem, NKL, Prodrive Technologies, Recoy, Renewable Energy Factory (REF ), Rocsys, Scholt Energy, Shell, Stichting ElaadNL, Sycada, TNO, TSN Groen, Eindhoven University of Technology, Van Berkel Logistics, Van Kessel, XYZ Dynamics, Zero Emissions Services (ZES).

cpb.nl (Proposal with Centraal Planbureau)

Keyword: Dutch Gov’ funds Charging Energy Hubs for heavy-duty EVs

CAR'S NEWS RELATED

Xing Mobility brings immersion-cooling battery system to Europe

Xing Mobility, a developer of immersion cooling for batteries, has entered a strategic partnership with Nordic Booster. The Norwegian company specialises in batteries for construction equipment and mobile charging systems for heavy industrial vehicles. The cooperation brings Xing Mobility’s Immersio XM25 battery system, which the Taiwanese company introduced last ...

View more: Xing Mobility brings immersion-cooling battery system to Europe

Nottingham now home to one of UK’s largest V2G installation

Nottingham and Connected Energy have launched a large-scale vehicle-to-grid (V2G) demonstrator project. Installation of solar panels, battery storage and 40 bi-directional EV chargers complete the CleanMobilEnergy pilot at Nottingham City Council’s Eastcroft Depot. Just outside the city centre, the depot is home to a fleet of 250 electric vehicles, ...

View more: Nottingham now home to one of UK’s largest V2G installation

TCS buys stake in Sun2Wheel

The Touring Club Switzerland (TCS) has acquired a 20 per cent stake in the startup Sun2Wheel. According to the largest mobility club in Switzerland, it wants to expand its involvement in electric mobility. Details of the transaction were not disclosed. TCS says it also wants to participate in further ...

View more: TCS buys stake in Sun2Wheel

Swarco & Connected roll out charging in the UK

In the UK, the EV infrastructure provider Swarco Smart Charging and second life battery energy storage system supplier Connected Energy have teamed up to help accelerate the roll out of EV charging. By working with Connected Energy, Swarco Smart Charging will be able to provide EV charging hardware with ...

View more: Swarco & Connected roll out charging in the UK

2nd Life energy storage in California generates $1m turnover

Los Angeles-based B2U Storage Solutions is currently using 1,300 retired battery packs from old Honda & Nissan electric vehicles at its solar and energy storage facility in Lancaster, California. Now the storage facility has reached an energy content of 25 MWh. B2U (“Battery Second Use”) Storage Solutions specialises in ...

View more: 2nd Life energy storage in California generates $1m turnover

ChargePoint moves into AI-driven buffer batteries from Stem

ChargePoint and Stem, an AI-driven clean energy solutions provider, have agreed to join forces and put artificial intelligence behind EV charging. They aim for lower operating costs, added energy resiliency, and options for battery backup when locating new sites. ChargePoint will also analyse the EV charging demand at sites ...

View more: ChargePoint moves into AI-driven buffer batteries from Stem

The Mobility House shows how to earn from EV batteries

The Mobility House (TMH) has, for the first time, proven that electric vehicle batteries can take part in energy market trading and achieve four-digit revenues per vehicle. The key is in the EVs’ flexibility as mobile storage units, just the experimental set-up was stationery. The Mobility House is based ...

View more: The Mobility House shows how to earn from EV batteries

ADS-TEC Energy scores significant order in the US

ADS-TEC Energy has received its largest single order to date in the US for its battery-boosted fast-charging solution. Infrastructure investor Smart City Capital plans to deploy more than 200 ChargeBox charging stations in the state of Florida. This expands SCC’s initial order announced late last year. At that time, ...

View more: ADS-TEC Energy scores significant order in the US

Vcharge Asia Introduces Fast-Charging EV Infrastructure

Connected Kerb to install chargers across Cardiff

Hubject integrates Driveco charging points

Charge + targets 30k charging points in SE Asia by 2030

Interview: Tobias Wolff, Business Developer DACH at Delta Electronics

New York steps up EV and charging infrastructure funding

USA: EVgo to set up 20 charging locations in Ohio

Galp and Powerdot build HPC stations in Spain

Norwegian grocery store ASKO invests in charging infrastructure

China invests to speed up NEV adoption

USA: ABC Companies and Proterra open largest motorcoach charging facility

Nissan will adopt Tesla’s NACS from 2025

OTHER CAR NEWS

; Top List in the World https://www.pinterest.com/newstopcar/pins/
Top Best Sushi Restaurants in SeoulTop Best Caribbean HoneymoonsTop Most Beautiful Islands in PeruTop Best Outdoor Grill BrandsTop Best Global Seafood RestaurantsTop Foods to Boost Your Immune SystemTop Best Foods to Fight HemorrhoidsTop Foods That Pack More Potassium Than a BananaTop Best Healthy Foods to Gain Weight FastTop Best Cosmetic Brands in the U.STop Best Destinations for Food Lovers in EuropeTop Best Foods High in Vitamin ATop Best Foods to Lower Your Blood SugarTop Best Things to Do in LouisianaTop Best Cities to Visit in New YorkTop Best Makeup Addresses In PennsylvaniaTop Reasons to Visit NorwayTop Most Beautiful Islands In The WorldTop Best Law Universities in the WorldTop Richest Sportsmen In The WorldTop Biggest Aquariums In The WorldTop Best Peruvian Restaurants In MiamiTop Best Road Trips From MiamiTop Best Places to Visit in MarylandTop Best Places to Visit in North CarolinaTop Best Electric Cars For KidsTop Best Swedish Brands in The USTop Best Skincare Brands in AmericaTop Best American Lipstick BrandsTop Michelin-starred Restaurants in MiamiTop Best Secluded Getaways From MiamiTop Best Things To Do On A Rainy Day In MiamiTop Most Instagrammable Places In MiamiTop Interesting Facts about FlorenceTop Facts About The First Roman Emperor - AugustusTop Best Japanese FoodsTop Most Beautiful Historical Sites in IsraelTop Best Places To Visit In Holy SeeTop Best Hawaiian IslandsTop Reasons to Visit PortugalTop Best Hotels In L.A. With Free Wi-FiTop Best Scenic Drives in MiamiTop Best Vegan Restaurants in BerlinTop Most Interesting Attractions In WalesTop Health Benefits of a Vegan DietTop Best Thai Restaurant in Las VegasTop Most Beautiful Forests in SwitzerlandTop Best Global Universities in GermanyTop Most Beautiful Lakes in GuyanaTop Best Things To Do in IdahoTop Things to Know Before Traveling to North MacedoniaTop Best German Sunglasses BrandsTop Highest Mountains In FranceTop Biggest Hydroelectric Plants in AmericaTop Best Spa Hotels in NYCTop The World's Scariest BridgeTop Largest Hotels In AmericaTop Most Famous Festivals in JordanTop Best European Restaurants in MunichTop Best Japanese Hiking Boot BrandsTop Best Universities in PolandTop Best Tips for Surfing the Web Safely and AnonymouslyTop Most Valuable Football Clubs in EuropeTop Highest Mountains In ColombiaTop Real-Life Characters of Texas RisingTop Best Beaches in GuatelamaTop Things About DR Congo You Should KnowTop Best Korean Reality & Variety ShowsTop Best RockstarsTop Most Beautiful Waterfalls in GermanyTop Best Fountain Pen Ink BrandsTop Best European Restaurants in ChicagoTop Best Fighter Jets in the WorldTop Best Three-Wheel MotorcyclesTop Most Beautiful Lakes in ManitobaTop Best Dive Sites in VenezuelaTop Best Websites For Art StudentsTop Best Japanese Instant Noodle BrandsTop Best Comedy Manhwa (Webtoons)Top Best Japanese Sunglasses BrandsTop Most Expensive Air Jordan SneakersTop Health Benefits of CucumberTop Famous Universities in SwedenTop Most Popular Films Starring Jo Jung-sukTop Interesting Facts about CougarsTop Best Hospitals for Hip Replacement in the USATop Most Expensive DefendersTop Health Benefits of GooseberriesTop Health Benefits of ParsnipsTop Best Foods and Drinks in LondonTop Health Benefits of Rosehip TeaTop Best Air Fryers for Low-fat CookingTop Most Asked Teacher Interview Questions with AnswersTop Best Shopping Malls in ZurichTop The Most Beautiful Botanical Gardens In L.A.Top Best Mexican Restaurants in Miami for Carb-loading rightTop Best Energy Companies in GermanyTop Best Garage HeatersTop Largest Banks in IrelandTop Leading Provider - Audit and Assurance In The USTop Best Jewelry Brands in IndiaTop Prettiest Streets in the UKTop Best Lakes to Visit in TunisiaTop Highest Mountains in Israel