Oslo to become first city with wireless charging infrastructure for electric taxis

Authored by electrek.co and submitted by mvea

Norway’s appetite for electric cars is booming, and its capital of Oslo will be the first to install wireless charging infrastructure for the city’s electric taxis.

Finnish energy company Fortum announced its partnership with Oslo on the project, in conjunction with American wireless charging company Momentum Dynamics. Charging plates will be installed in the road at taxi stands in the city, and receivers will be placed in the taxis.

While waiting for customers at the stands, the taxis will charge via induction at a rate of up to 75 kW. Fortum says, “The project will be the first wireless fast-charging infrastructure for electric taxis anywhere in the world, and will also help the further development of wireless charging technology for all EV drivers.”

Fortum has long been focused on electrifying taxi fleets, claiming that typical charging infrastructure has been a challenge. Its wireless charging infrastructure is built to solve the issue of taxi drivers searching around for chargers and waiting to charge.

Oslo’s taxis will be completely emission-free by 2023. Oslo Electro Mobility Manager Sture Portvik said,

“The future is electric, and it is already here, right now. Wireless charging is a potential game changer. From 2023 onward, all taxis in Oslo will be zero emission. Together with the taxi industry we will make sure that the shift is as user friendly and efficient as possible. Oslo will always be at the front of innovation and we are delighted to join forces with two of the industry’s most progressive players in this game-changing move to launch the world’s most ambitious plan for wireless charging of a taxi fleet.”

Norway is all in on electric vehicles. Electric car sales grew 40 percent in Norway last year, and Tesla’s Model 3 recently broke delivery records in the country.

Wireless EV charging is most often less efficient than plugging in, and only slightly more convenient. We get the concept of charging while waiting for customers — but is it really more convenient than a regular charging station, which is likely going to be more efficient and therefore, cost less to operate?

It’ll be interesting to see the results once the infrastructure is installed and taxi drivers give their feedback.

oafcmetty on March 22nd, 2019 at 12:17 UTC »

Beaten by coventry, no?

https://www.levc.com/corporate/news/go-electric-taxi-launch/

louis-wu on March 22nd, 2019 at 11:52 UTC »

Have they actually tried this tech?

How long does it take to recharge a car? How hot does the charging plate get? How hot does the receiving plate get? How much of the 75kW is actually transferred from the charging plate to the car's batteries? That is, what is the power loss in the system? Does the power transfer degrade with water/ice on the road/car? Will wireless devices like cell phones be damaged by the charging plates?

A lot of questions are not addressed in the article.

Dabnician on March 22nd, 2019 at 11:29 UTC »

Everything I hear about Oslo makes me want to live there... mostly

edit: Most of my experience is with people from the technology sector in Oslo, so im specifically talking about things important to a geek,ie tech sector/education.