CHARLOTTE, N.C. ā€“ More electric vehicle charging stations are popping up across North Carolina.


What You Need To Know

  • According to the website ā€˜ChargeHub,ā€™ there are a little over 1,600 public chargers available in North Carolina
  • Most public stations are being placed in front of retail stores and restaurants
  • Gov. Roy Cooper has said that the goal is to have 1.25 million EVs on the road by 2030

According to the website ā€˜ChargeHubā€™, there are a little over 1,600 public chargers available in North Carolina. Thatā€™s up a couple hundred from last year.

Since it takes about 20 to 30 minutes for a quick charge, most stations are being placed in front of retail stores and restaurants.

Charlotte-area startup company Koulomb recently opened its first public fast-charging station in Matthews near Marioā€™s Italian Restaurant.

Restaurant owner John Fisichello says the chargers have been helpful in drawing in new customers to his business at the Chestnut Arbor Shopping Center.

ā€œIā€™m seeing increased traffic already of faces Iā€™ve never seen coming in,ā€ Fisichello said. ā€œSitting at the bar and saying, ā€˜Iā€™m just charging my car, and I wanted to find a place for a cold beerā€™.ā€ā€œIā€™m seeing increased traffic already of faces Iā€™ve never seen coming in,ā€ Fisichello said. ā€œSitting at the bar and saying, ā€˜Iā€™m just charging my car, and I wanted to find a place for a cold beerā€™.ā€

Koulomb co-founders Justin Taylor and Jeff Constantineau say since there are more EVs on the road than chargers, so it didnā€™t take long for their first user to show up at their station in Matthews.

ā€œWe actually just moved the cones,ā€ Taylor said. ā€œAnd within two minutes, we had a customer pull in and just start charging their car.ā€

Constantineau says they aim to open a new fast-charging station around the Charlotte area each month.

They plan on placing them near popular spots, like Marioā€™s.

ā€œNormally we would have expected spikes in usage at commuter times, but what we see here is actually lunchtime usage, and weekend usage, which speaks to the Marioā€™s draw,ā€ Constantineau said.

As more drivers go electric, Fisichello says heā€™s grateful for a new way to draw in more customers.

ā€œTo have this opportunity with Koulomb with the EV charging stations, itā€™s just a dream come true in a lot of ways,ā€ Fisichello said.

According to NCDOT, over 60,000 Zero Emission Vehicles (ZEV) were registered in March, thatā€™s up by about 17,000 from May 2022.

Gov. Roy Cooper has said that the goal is to have 1.25 million EVs on the road by 2030.