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‘Worst of all worlds’ for EV charging companies |
Electric vehicle charging network companies know that this is crunch time.
Low utilization rates and high operating costs are hamstringing profits. Money is tight. Charging satisfaction is at an all-time low. And after waiting years for networks to get it together, automakers are joining with Tesla Inc. in an unexpected alliance.
Two of the largest publicly held charging networks in the U.S., ChargePoint and Blink Charging, have less than a year of cash left, according to their most recent quarterly filings.
They both said their business models, reliant on charger equipment sales more than owning and operating networks themselves, were not as sensitive to cash burn. But company leaders and industry analysts agree that this is a decisive moment for the networks.
“It’s kind of a perfect storm” for charging network companies, said Sam Abuelsamid, an analyst at Guidehouse Insights. “They’re facing new competition, and their customers are not happy, and they need to spend money, but they can’t get the money, so it’s kind of the worst of all worlds for them.”
Some of the largest charging companies, such as Electrify America, are privately held and do not publish information about their financial performance.
But others are running through cash reserves.
—Molly Boignon
What you need to know
EV heavyweights put other road users at risk: When sedans inevitably collide with EV pickups that weigh as much as 6,000 pounds more, the results will be worse, experts say.
Automakers once worked hard to shave vehicle weight: EVs have reversed that progress, creating pollution and other issues.
Ford bullish on EVs despite losses, production challenges: Ford says a second-generation platform that will underpin a full-size pickup and two crossovers in the next few years will be key to making its EV business profitable.
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EV battery supplier Redwood Materials raises more than $1 billion to expand U.S. operations.
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