Islandwide Implementation of Electric Vehicle Charging Points
Ministry of TransportSpeakers
Summary
This question concerns MP Cheryl Chan Wei Ling’s inquiry on whether the islandwide implementation of electric vehicle (EV) charging points will mirror the plan for the eight EV-ready towns. Minister for Transport S Iswaran explained that the strategy prioritises geographical coverage based on electrical infrastructure, aiming for all HDB towns to be EV-ready by the 2030s. To ensure charging infrastructure leads adoption, a pilot tender will install over 600 charging points at 200 public carparks over the next year. For private developments, owners are encouraged to assess user needs, supported by government initiatives like the EV Common Charger Grant for non-landed private residences. The Minister highlighted that the eight initial towns were chosen for their immediate capacity to support charging points, though deployment will proceed in as many public carparks as possible elsewhere.
Transcript
108 Miss Cheryl Chan Wei Ling asked the Minister for Transport whether the implementation plan across Singapore for electric vehicle (EV) charging points will be a replica of the eight EV-ready towns.
Mr S Iswaran: Our strategy for deploying EV charging points in public carparks is to improve geographical coverage as quickly as the electrical infrastructure and capacity permit. In so doing, we will ensure that the number of charging points leads EV adoption by a calibrated margin.
We have chosen to highlight eight EV-Ready Towns, as these are the ones where existing electricity capacity can support charging points at all car parks with minimal upgrading. For all the other towns, we will also be deploying charging points in as many public carparks as possible. For instance, the Government’s pilot charging point deployment tender, awarded earlier this month, will see over 600 charging points at around 200 public carparks installed over the next year. By the 2030s, every HDB town will be an EV-Ready Town.
For private developments, premises owners have to assess the deployment of EV charging points taking into account the needs of their users and the existing electrical capacity. Several commercial developments, like retail malls and petrol stations, as well as some private residences, have already installed EV charging points. The Government will continue to facilitate such deployment, for instance, by launching the EV Common Charger Grant to further incentivise EV charger installation at non-landed private residences.