With EV adoption accelerating across Europe, demand for high-power charging infrastructure continues to grow. As charging above 300 kW, heavy-duty electrification, and MCS use cases gain momentum, operators are also facing increasing pressures around grid capacity, network reliability, and operational cost.To address these evolving operational demands, Autel’s distributed charging architecture is built around centralized power units and distributed charging points, designed to support flexible and scalable site configurations. The DS600L acts as the system’s power backbone, offering power scalability of up to 3 MW and featuring hot-swappable power modules for maintenance without taking the system offline.The platform can be paired with multiple dispenser solutions across the Autel portfolio. Among these is the MaxiCharger DT300, a rail-mounted charging management system supporting up to 10 EVs in parallel per cabinet. The system enables dynamic power distribution across multiple charging points based on real-time demand, improving overall site utilization and operational efficiency.For sites where faster deployment and lower installation complexity are priorities, the newly introduced MaxiCharger DH120 provides a compact, cost-efficient, and easy-to-install solution for applications including destination charging and fleet depot charging, while supporting overall system uptime of up to 98%.Beyond hardware, Autel Energy Europe also focuses on how charging sites are deployed, operated, and maintained over time, where small operational frictions can accumulate into meaningful cost and complexity.For deployment, One-Click Site Commissioning combines cloud pre-configuration with guided setup and rapid activation, helping operators bring sites online faster, particularly in multi-unit installations. For maintenance, Tablet 2.0 enables AI-driven, component-level diagnostics across the Autel portfolio, helping field teams identify faults faster and reduce service time on site.“Across Europe, our customers are moving beyond individual charging units to managing entire charging ecosystems,” said Andreas Lastei, VP Smart Energy at Autel Energy Europe. “As charging infrastructure scales, operators are facing growing challenges around uptime, system complexity, and long-term operational efficiency. We are increasingly focusing on how charging systems perform over time, combining hardware, software, and service capabilities to support more reliable deployment, operation, and maintenance at scale.”The industry is moving from a question of whether charging can be deployed to one of how it can be deployed at scale, operated reliably, and expanded efficiently. The product, service, and ecosystem progress shared at the 2026 Partner Summit is oriented toward that shift and aims to help European operators and their customers prepare for it.This is a sponsored article and the client is responsible for the content. If you’d like to inquire about similar opportunities, please get in touch via [email protected].