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Economic Development

Government urged to improve EV infrastructure as growing North-South divide is revealed

Calls are backed by Vertu Motors' CEO Robert Forrester who said Government expectations of private sector is too high

Robert Forrester, CEO of Vertu Motors

An automotive industry group has called on the Government to improve infrastructure for electric vehicles, after new figures revealed a growing North-South divide in charging point availability.

The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) has published a seven-point plan which aims to ensure all drivers can benefit from an electric vehicle charging network that is affordable, available and accessible to all.

The sale of new petrol and diesel cars and vans will be banned in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ from 2030 and rising demand for electric vehicles shows they now account for almost 20% of new car sales.

Read more: Go here for more automotive news

But public charging infrastructure is struggling to keep up in some areas, and SMMT research has shown the number of public charges in the North rising from one in 37 to one in 52 last year, while standing at only one in 30 in the South.

Greater adoption of electric vehicles will be key for the North East economy, with Nissan set to add production of a second EV at it Sunderland plant and the region set to have the first two battery gigafactories in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

The SMMT says a nationally coordinated and locally delivered infrastructure plan would put the needs of consumers first, while also giving chargepoint operators and local authorities certainty to install the right number of the right chargers in the right places ahead of need, across every part of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Those calls have been backed by Gateshead-based national motor chain Vertu Motors, whose CEO Robert Forrester said Government expectations of local authorities and private sector is too high.