Infrastructure & Energy

EV charger firms say energy bill increases will be passed on to drivers

Electric vehicle charger firms have warned soaring energy bills will have to be passed on to drivers, risking a major setback for the government’s green goals.

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  • March 30, 2026
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Electric vehicle charger firms have warned soaring energy bills will have to be passed on to drivers, risking a major setback for the government’s green goals.

Charging companies are being saddled with massive network charges that have increased by an average of 462% over the past three years, industry body ChargeUK has found.

They have warned charging companies may have no choice but to pass on the cost to drivers, which could put some people off buying an electric vehicle (EV) and place the government’s plan to ban petrol and diesel car sales by 2030 at risk.

One company reported a 38,000% rise in its annual fixed charges since 2021.

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Opposition parties have told Sky News the government needs to change its levies and policies on electricity if it wants to reach its goal of weaning the UK off oil and gas and ease the cost of living.

Energy regulator Ofgem changed how standing charges – which pay for network maintenance and upgrade work – apply to businesses in 2023 to try to stop large firms from gaming the system.

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This means energy bills for businesses are now mainly made up of fixed standing charges, determined by Ofgem, instead of consumption.

But EV charging companies say this has unfairly targeted them because they are being charged to have a large connection to the energy grid to deliver sizeable amounts of power in the future, but there are currently not enough EVs in the UK to use the available power.

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