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Growth Opportunities in European Electric Bus Charging Infrastructure

  • Report

  • 62 Pages
  • December 2022
  • Region: Europe
  • Frost & Sullivan
  • ID: 5709864

Emissions Regulations, Favorable Legislations, and Costs Influence Infrastructure Development and Uptake

Tightening emissions regulations, the Clean Vehicles Directive, and government subsidies increasingly drive European bus operators to purchase electric buses for their fleets. However, putting more electric buses on the road requires sufficient charging infrastructure. Most electric fleets operating in Europe use only depot charging or a combination of the depot and en-route charging. The advantage of the latter case is it requires a smaller battery pack, which increases passenger capacity but incurs higher charging infrastructure costs. Several factors hinder charging infrastructure development, including high capital investment and charging costs and an extended return on investment period.

Although these constraints may slow adoption, drivers such as improved cost of ownership, enhanced battery capacity, shorter charging time, and favorable legislation that offers rebates will continue to push the charging infrastructure market forward over the next decade.

The charging infrastructure value chain must be robust and efficient to meet this demand. The value chain starts from energy generation, followed by storage and distribution through transmission and distribution operators to reach public/private hubs. Multiple participants in different parts of the value chain cater to the charging requirements of the growing number of electric buses.

In this report, the publisher analyzes the European electric bus charging infrastructure market between 2022 and 2030, with 2022 as the base year. The forecast period is 2023-2030. The publisher computed energy consumption based on charger level (50 kW-1MW) for the forecast period. The report also provides the levelized cost of charging forecast until 2030 for depot and en-route charging. Extensive use case analysis focuses on cost-optimal bus charging, comparing depot against pantograph for electric buses with battery capacity from 80 kWh to 560 kWh for short and long distances.

The publisher provides in-depth information and insights to enable charging operators to capitalize on the opportunities available during this period.

Table of Contents

1. Strategic Imperatives
  • Why is it Increasingly Difficult to Grow?
  • The Strategic Imperative 8™
  • The Impact of the Top 3 Strategic Imperatives on the Electric Bus Industry
  • Growth Opportunities Fuel the Growth Pipeline Engine™
2. Growth Opportunity Analysis
  • Growth Metrics
  • Research Scope
  • Product and Technology Segmentation
  • Forecast Criteria for Bus
  • Growth Drivers
  • Growth Restraints
3. Growth Opportunity Analysis
  • Electric Buses in Operation, 2022, 2025, and 2030
  • Charging Solutions
  • EV Charging Infrastructure Value Chain
  • Energy Consumption based on Charger Level - Depot Charging
  • Energy Consumption based on Charger Level - En-route Charging
  • Energy Consumption based on Charger Level - Electric Bus
  • Depot Chargers Required - Low- and High-utilization Scenarios
  • En-route Chargers Required - Low- and High-utilization Scenarios
  • Forecast Analysis
  • Levelized Cost of Charging Forecast for Depot Charging
  • Levelized Cost of Charging Forecast for En-route Charging
4. Company Profiles
  • ABB
  • Furrer+Frey
  • Schunk Transit Systems GmbH
  • JEMA Energy
  • Hitachi Energy
  • Ekoenergetyka
  • Heliox Energy
  • Siemens
5. Use Case Analysis
  • Use Case Analysis to Identify Best Split Usage of Depot vs. Panto
  • Combination A1 - 150 km Daily Operations with an 80 kWh Battery
  • Combination A2 - 150 km Daily Operations with a 200 kWh Battery
  • Combination A3 - 150 km Daily Operations with a 280 kWh Battery
  • Combination A4 - 150 km Daily Operations with a 560 kWh Battery
  • Combination B1 - 300 km Daily Operations with an 80 kWh Battery
  • Combination B2 - 300 km Daily Operations with a 200 kWh Battery
  • Combination B3 - 300 km Daily Operations with a 280 kWh Battery
  • Combination B4 - 300 km Daily Operations with a 560 kWh Battery
  • Summary - NPV Comparison for 8 Use Case Combinations
6. Growth Opportunity Universe
  • Growth Opportunity 1 - Move Toward Cleaner and Zero-emission Transportation Through Electrification
  • Growth Opportunity 2 - Developing Competent Charging Technology to Drive Market Growth
  • Growth Opportunity 3 - Expanding Revenue Opportunities for Value Chain Participant Growth
7. Next Steps
  • Your Next Steps
  • Why Frost, Why Now?
  • List of Exhibits
  • Legal Disclaimer

Companies Mentioned (Partial List)

A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:

  • ABB
  • Ekoenergetyka
  • Furrer+Frey
  • Heliox Energy
  • Hitachi Energy
  • JEMA Energy
  • Schunk Transit Systems GmbH
  • Siemens