Ofgem invests £300m into EV charge points, with £40bn more to come
Delivered over the next two years, the investment forms part of an estimated £40bn investment plan to bolster the UK’s EV infrastructure while maintaining secure supplies of electricity.
The Office of Gas and Electricity Markets, also known as Ofgem, has invested £300m into expanding the UK’s electric vehicle (EV) charging network today, to push the pedal on the country’s low carbon future.
In the bid for net zero, the non-ministerial government department has put money behind the electric vehicle sector, to instal 1,800 new charge points across motorway service areas and key trunk road spots.
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SHETLAND Islands Council is stepping up its campaign to seek political support for the idea that hosting the Viking Energy wind farm should enable the isles to negotiate cheaper electricity prices and thus combat high levels of fuel poverty.
Chief executive Maggie Sandison said it was unacceptable to have a situation where the isles are due to become a net exporter of green electricity yet have one of the highest rates of fuel poverty in the country.
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An initial approach was made to the Scotland Office in February, but judging by the response the government department provided to
Total electrification of Nigeria has now become imperative
Nigeria s Minister of Power Saleh Mamman
The issue of 24 hours a day, seven days a week adequate electricity supply to all the villages, towns and cities in Nigeria has remained a matter of concern to many well meaning Nigerians ever since the country acquired self rule on 1 October 1960. The huge sums of money allocated to this sector have never been appropriately utilized because of the cancerous official corruption that has continued to eat deeply into the fabric of the Nigerian society, especially among the civil service and government agencies saddled with the responsibility of projects management.