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2023 will see 448,000 new electric vehicles hitting UK roads

By the end of 2022, more than 1.1 million electric cars had been registered in the UK in the ‘modern’ EV era (since 2010), taking 12 years to reach that figure. The SMMT forecasts that the next 1.1 million will be registered in the next two years, with more than 2.2 million expected to be on the road by the end of 2024. This year should see a major increase in the volume of electric cars hitting dealer and independent forecourts in the UK thanks to the enormous annual growth in new EV registrations back in 2020, when the market grew by over 140% with more than 175,000 registered. The Tesla Model 3 was supplied in particularly large volumes, so we can expect to see a significant number in the wholesale and retail markets over the coming months.

“The Government’s announcement of an EV Infrastructure Strategy to ensure the UK is ‘EV-fit’ by 2030 is a step in the right direction. Access to reliable charging infrastructure, both at-home and across the road network, is a key barrier to EV adoption, as identified by major global business members of our EV100 initiative this week.

The good thing about charging infrastructure is that it doesn’t take a long time to build and install it. Roadside charging stations can be planned and built in a matter of weeks or a few months, while a charging station at home or work takes even less time than that to plan and install.

The Future of Solar Energy considers only the two widely recognized classes of technologies for converting solar energy into electricity — photovoltaics (PV) and concentrated solar power (CSP), sometimes called solar thermal) — in their current and plausible future forms.

We concentrate on the use of grid-connected solar-powered generators to replace conventional sources of electricity. For the more than one billion people in the developing world who lack access to a reliable electric grid, the cost of small-scale PV generation is often outweighed by the very high value of access to electricity for lighting and charging mobile telephone and radio batteries. In addition, in some developing nations it may be economic to use solar generation to reduce reliance on imported oil, particularly if that oil must be moved by truck to remote generator sites.
Now, with solar photovoltaic technology becoming more and more affordable, scalable and accessible, that dream is getting closer to reality. This online course looks at solar PV in depth, examining its potential for today and the near future, exploring the technical challenges, and assessing the commercial opportunities. It offers you an unparalleled insight into the global solar power market, and will give you the knowledge and practical details to shape and lead the future of solar energy.

Discover the PV business and expand your professional options



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