CHARLOTTE, N.C. ā More electric vehicle charging stations are popping up across North Carolina.
According to the website āChargeHubā, there are a little over 1,600 public chargers available in North Carolina. Thatās 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 Marioās 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.
āIām seeing increased traffic already of faces Iāve never seen coming in,ā Fisichello said. āSitting at the bar and saying, āIām just charging my car, and I wanted to find a place for a cold beerā.āāIām seeing increased traffic already of faces Iāve never seen coming in,ā Fisichello said. āSitting at the bar and saying, āIām 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 didnāt take long for their first user to show up at their station in Matthews.
āWe actually just moved the cones,ā Taylor said. āAnd 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 Marioās.
āNormally 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 Marioās draw,ā Constantineau said.
As more drivers go electric, Fisichello says heās grateful for a new way to draw in more customers.
āTo have this opportunity with Koulomb with the EV charging stations, itās 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, thatās 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.