vendredi, septembre 20, 2024
Home Europe Electric vehicles clog busy Belgian port as demand slumps

Electric vehicles clog busy Belgian port as demand slumps


With a slowdown in demand for EVs, hundreds sit idle in a busy Belgian port’s car park, waiting for buyers and drivers.

ADVERTISEMENT

Up to three million electric vehicles are shuttled from cargo ships onto trucks every year at the western Belgian port of Zeebrugge.

With one in every four vehicles now electric, Zeebrugge’s port operator has had to change the landscape to accommodate the precious cargo.

This includes constructing a dozen wind turbines on the quayside; on-site battery recharging options; quality control and a ruthless hunt for the slightest defect to deliver ready-to-use cars to customers.

« This is the future, » said Anne Degrauw, a vehicle processing centre manager of import-export company ICO Terminals SA.

This coastal thoroughfare represents one of Europe’s largest ports and has undergone a massive transformation to accommodate the green evolution.

But instead of supplying an endless stream of China-made EVs to buyers, rows and rows of automobiles gather dust in the car park, reportedly due to oversupply.

This is compounded by lower-than-normal EV registrations, which sat at 13.5% in July 2024. This is a drop in the ocean compared to gas-powered cars.

François Simonart, an ICO Terminals SA sales manager, said there was an increase in volume for electric cars after the COVID-19 pandemic — but only from China as « they have the technology » and raw materials.



Source link

Must Read

video

INSIDE Zeus Monaco BILLONAIRE Luxury LIFESTYLE

"Welcome back to World Celebrity Island, your one-stop destination for all the latest celebrity news, stories, and updates from ... source

Was gender equality made to take a backseat in the next European Commission? | Radio Schuman

The European Commission's equality portfolio has been merged with the preparedness and crisis management portfolio,...

Guerre en Ukraine : un million de morts ou de blessés, selon le WSJ

Une enquête du Wall Street Journal publiée le 17 septembre fait état, après deux ans et demi de guerre en Ukraine, d’un très...

« Un climat de guerre n’est pas bon pour le climat tout court »

Les chiffres encourageants, bien que relatifs, de trajectoires d’émissions...