Installations of EV Chargers Collapse
With the evidence increasing for Labour’s Net Zero dreams slowly imploding, another piece of bad news has come along for the end of 2025. According to the Telegraph, for the first time the installation rate of EV chargers has fallen:
Public charger installations are down by 30% for the first 11 months of this year compared to all of 2024, the first time on record the rate has not increased.
Figures from Zap Map, which provides data to the Office for National Statistics, show that 13,469 were installed by the end of November this year, compared to a total of 19,834 in 2024.
The drop is a blow to Labour’s net zero plan to accelerate the switch to EVs and comes at a critical moment, with industry figures warning that a planned pay-per-mile tax on electric cars also threatens to deter sales.
Richard Holden, the Shadow Transport Secretary, said: “Labour is remorselessly driving to Net Zero, wilfully blind to the enormous cost of this obsession to ordinary people.
“And yet, even as they do so, they are totally failing to deliver the infrastructure required to achieve their ideological objectives.
“With EV charger installations falling, Labour are making it even harder for people to switch to electric cars.”
It seems there’s now little chance of the Government meeting its objectives:
Fewer than 90,000 EV chargers are currently in operation, meaning an average of 42,000 per year would need to be installed over the next five years to meet the target. That is more than double the annual record for installations set in 2024.
The Government’s 300,000 target is already at the lower end of the National Audit Office’s forecast that between 250,000 and 555,000 will be needed to meet demand by the end of this decade.
The most significant drop was in the rapid category, those with an output of between 50 and 150 kilowatts, which fell by 46%.
Installations of slow chargers, or those with outputs of less than eight kilowatts, are also 37% down.

What’s the reason for this precipitous collapse? The Telegraph claims that increases in energy prices and outrageous standing charges, sometimes as much as 460% for the latter, are to blame for providers throttling back on installations (despite the industry being propped up by taxpayer subsidies).
Of course, there is also the obvious fact that people who cannot, or never will be able, to charge at home at much lower rates than at public chargers are the drivers least likely to join the Government’s crusade to electrify Britain’s cars.
Worth noting that according to The Electric Car Scheme, home installation of a charger can cost between £800 and £2,000 (on top of a grant), even assuming you have the parking space and land on which to have one fitted, as well as the spare cash. It cites an average cost of £1,110 (before a grant of £350). As for public chargers, they’re increasingly prone to cable theft.
Meanwhile, the Government remains committed to ending the sale of new petrol and diesel cars by 2030, and with hybrids to follow in 2035.
Worth reading in full
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I don’t often see anyone using these public charging points. So why are they building more?
George Soros tells them to.
Last year in the space of a week I passed through 2 public car parks and none of the chargers were being used.
My council announced that it was “refurbishing and upgrading” my local car park – completely unnecessary as it did not appear to need anything more than a lick of paint on the barriers.
A mind boggling £400k later and hey presto, we’ve lost about 20% of the bays for newly installed EV chargers. Which are empty most of the time.
Its never about what they say its about.
“Labour is remorselessly driving to Net Zero, wilfully blind to the enormous cost of this obsession to ordinary people.”
Labour is not wilfully blind to the cost, they know full well what they are doing. Our Impoverishment is by design.
It is entirely by design. Most people find this bizarre and won’t believe it. But Government are aligning themselves with the UN Agenda called Sustainable Development that states that we in the wealthy west have become prosperous by using more than our fair share of the coal oil and gas in the ground and must stop doing that. We are to make do with less of everything and that starts off with ENERGY
Exactly
Impoverished people are more dependent on those who govern and easier to control.
‘Richard Holden, the Shadow Transport Secretary, said: “Labour is remorselessly driving to Net Zero, wilfully blind to the enormous cost of this obsession to ordinary people.”‘
Oh…that Net Zero so enthusiastically embraced by Boris & Co.?
Exactly
But, but, but… we are to believe there has been a Damascean conversion and the Conservative Party has become devout in its concern for “ordinary people” and has said: “Get thee behind me Net Zero thou Devil!”
In other News: they still have not renounced Climatism, so beware of false prophets.
Not exactly joyful news
The number of charging points is increasing
Down here in rural Dorset EV chargers are as rare as hens’ teeth. My local small town centre has about 3 or 4 in a couple of car parks …. which I don’t think will be enough for the several thousand people who live in the town centre and don’t have driveways at their old, small, terrace cottages 🙂
If the Establishment persists with the nonsense the economy will grind to a complete halt in a few years as people’s old ICE cars can no longer be kept on the road.
This is what we get with government driven ideas. With market driven ideas you get none of this because if the people don’t want something they don’t spend their money on it, and the company that tries to sell them something they don’t want they go bust. ——But with government they force us all to fund and pay for the stuff that they want, not what we want.
Socialism is a planned economy. The current Socialism is unique in that there is no plan.
Socialism needs centralised control to plan the economy. The current lot are too easily satisfied by ‘achieving’ centralised control – without any thoughts of the impact on the economy.
The plan is lowering the standard of living because the UN considers our lifestyle “unsustainable”—-Tragically our Political Class are fully onboard with this idea.
Economics: businesses installing and operating car battery chargers need to make a return on investment. That means increasing volume of users and thus sales revenue to pass merely “break even” and make a profit enough to justify investment, plus being able to charge prices the market will bear. The volume just isn’t there nor likely. Charging times limit through-put which limits revenue per sales point. A petrol/diesel pump can serve maybe ten vehicles/purchases per hour, a charger will at most manage three or four, or fewer if slow charger. Public chargers also compete with home chargers. Physics: the more chargers and the faster they are at a charger-station, the greater the power requirement – needing heavy duty cabling and local low voltage distribution equipment capable of handling the load, which may require upgrade to existing infrastructure. Who pays? What clearly is overlooked is that manufacture and retail supply of motor fuels increased organically over decades as the number of motor vehicles and thus demand increased incrementally. The current situation is electricity production and retail supply plus infrastructure needs to appear virtually overnight to cope with demand – assuming BEVs replace at least more than half of ICEVs within the next… Read more »