By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
China ObserverChina Observer
Notification
Latest News
Yiwu home to more than 10,000 foreign-funded business entities
March 29, 2026
China planning human research program at space station
March 28, 2026
China’s narrative of economic resilience, technological advancement takes center stage at Boao Forum
March 28, 2026
The Devastating Impact of Wars on Climate Change
March 26, 2026
MSM Unify and Walsh College UAE Release Whitepaper on Middle East’s Rising Role in Global Student Mobility
March 25, 2026
Aa
  • Home
  • Pakistan
  • China
  • Sports
  • World
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Tourism
  • Videos
  • Health
  • More
    • Articles
    • Currency Rates
    • Gold Rates
    • Daily Horoscope
Reading: China keeps upgrading world’s largest EV charging network
Share
Aa
China ObserverChina Observer
  • Home
  • Pakistan
  • China
  • Sports
  • World
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Tourism
  • Videos
  • Health
  • More
Search
  • Home
  • Pakistan
  • China
  • Sports
  • World
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Tourism
  • Videos
  • Health
  • More
    • Articles
    • Currency Rates
    • Gold Rates
    • Daily Horoscope
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
China Observer > Blog > China > China keeps upgrading world’s largest EV charging network
ChinaTechnology

China keeps upgrading world’s largest EV charging network

February 19, 2026 5 Min Read
Updated 19/02/26 at 10:57 AM
Share
5 Min Read
A heavy-duty truck is charged at a charging station in Miyun district, Beijing. (Photo/Hu Qingming)

By Bai Guangdi, Zheng Yangyang, Wang Yongzhan, People’s Daily

By the end of December 2025, China had built 20.092 million electric vehicle (EV) charging facilities, forming the world’s largest EV charging network. This infrastructure supports over 43 million new energy vehicles nationwide.

In early 2026, China announced a three-year action plan (2025-2027) to upgrade its EV charging infrastructure. The plan targets establishing 28 million charging facilities by 2027, providing more than 300 million kilowatts of public charging capacity and to serve over 80 million electric vehicles.

A woman charges her car at a charging station in Dongkou county, Shaoyang, central China’s Hunan province. (Photo/Teng Zhizhong)

China is accelerating the expansion of public charging infrastructure nationwide. Key initiatives include deploying. ultra-fast and fast chargers at highway service areas, installing fast chargers in townships, ensuring charging access in central villages, and introducing professional operators in urban communities. These measures are steadily improving charging conditions and rapidly enhancing overall service capacity.

Workers test charging facilities at a workshop of a power transformation equipment manufacturer in Fuzhou, east China’s Jiangxi province. (Photo/Zhu Haipeng)

“Heavy trucks require significant charging capacity, but many highway service areas lacked sufficient power,” explained Wang, a truck driver from Henan province. During a recent stop at Taihu service area on Suzhou Ring Expressway, he experienced remarkable efficiency: “Using the dual-gun charging system, I added 63 kWh in just 15 minutes – that’s incredibly fast!”

Chu Zhili, manager of the Taihu service area charging facilities, noted: “We’ve installed four dedicated charging stations for heavy-duty EVs. The dual-gun system delivers up to 480 kilowatts — nearly four times conventional charging speeds.”

Operational since September 2025, the Taihu station is Jiangsu province’s first demonstration site combining megawatt-level flexible ultra-fast charging with intelligent operations. The AI-driven system monitors safety hazards and equipment status in real-time, integrates multiple data streams, and supports maintenance decisions to ensure charging and travel safety.

At noon in Dongguo village, north China’s Shanxi province, resident Wang Baoqin charged her new energy vehicle at a local station paying just 0.68 yuan (about $0.1) per kWh. “Village charging is incredibly convenient,” she noted. “This is actually the most economical time to charge.”

In July 2024, Changzi county was included in China’s first batch of pilot counties aimed at strengthening county-level charging and battery-swapping infrastructure.

“We carried out a county-wide survey and selected charging sites based on 12 indicators, such as population density, tourism resources, traffic flow, and agricultural production layouts,” said Liu Jing, director of the county’s energy bureau.

Through government-enterprise cooperation, charging facilities have been installed in 68 villages. The county’s charging infrastructure plan is based on a projected average annual growth of 25 percent in local new energy vehicle ownership over the next three to five years. Construction is underway across 96 villages and along key rural roads.

“Upon completion, over 65 percent of the county will have charging access, with townships offering fast charging and major villages providing basic facilities,” Liu added.

In the eastern section of the Linjiangyuan residential community in Chengdu, southwest China’s Sichuan province, resident Yang Jing pulled into the underground garage. After scanning a QR code and plugging in, the charging indicator lit up, and she simply headed off.

In Chengdu, Sichuan province, resident Yang Jing now charges effortlessly in her residential garage. Previously, residents of Linjiangyuan community faced significant challenges: public parking spaces prohibited private charger installation, forcing them to make 20-minute trips to nearby parks for charging.

After persistent resident appeals, community officials discovered a provincial initiative encouraging professional operators to manage residential charging. Through competitive bidding, two companies were selected to install approximately 40 charging piles per community section, strategically planned according to EV density and local power capacity. This solution has effectively resolved the community’s longstanding charging difficulties.

You Might Also Like

Yiwu home to more than 10,000 foreign-funded business entities

China planning human research program at space station

China’s narrative of economic resilience, technological advancement takes center stage at Boao Forum

Chinese smart technologies shine at 2026 Mobile World Congress

A day in the life of China’s economy

admin February 19, 2026
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Print
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
Facebook Like
Twitter Follow
Instagram Follow
Youtube Subscribe
China

Yiwu home to more than 10,000 foreign-funded business entities

ChinaTechnology

China planning human research program at space station

China

China’s narrative of economic resilience, technological advancement takes center stage at Boao Forum

Articles

The Devastating Impact of Wars on Climate Change

World

MSM Unify and Walsh College UAE Release Whitepaper on Middle East’s Rising Role in Global Student Mobility

You Might Also Like

China

Yiwu home to more than 10,000 foreign-funded business entities

March 29, 2026
ChinaTechnology

China planning human research program at space station

March 28, 2026
China

China’s narrative of economic resilience, technological advancement takes center stage at Boao Forum

March 28, 2026
China

Chinese smart technologies shine at 2026 Mobile World Congress

March 16, 2026
logo-chinaoberver-tranparent-small

About US

We influence 20 million users and is the number one business and technology news network on the planet.
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Complaint
  • Advertise
Menu
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Complaint
  • Advertise

Market Performers

Subscribe US

Weather Widgets for Websites

©China observer. All Rights Reserved.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?