Inside the UK Electric Van Study: What the Appendices Reveal About Fleet Charging, Driver Archetypes, and Smart-Charging Readiness
The “main findings” tell you what the researchers concluded. The appendices show how they got there—what they asked fleets and drivers, how participants were screened, and how charging behaviour was categorised. For fleet operators, these materials are valuable because they can be reused as a practical template for your own EV rollout diagnostics.
The appendices include recruitment information sheets, consent materials, driver screeners, the fleet operator survey, and interview topic guides. These tools clarify the research scope: the study targeted both fleets that had already adopted electric vans and those that had not, with a focus on driving patterns, charging patterns (where applicable), attitudes, and barriers/enablers—especially around smart charging.
1) Research design in plain English
Fleet operators were asked to complete a short online survey (stated as taking no longer than 10 minutes) and some were invited to a longer interview (up to 1 hour). Fleet operators could also nominate van drivers for interviews.
The driver interviews were designed as short sessions (30 minutes), and the recruitment materials specify a participation incentive.
3) The archetype framework: the most useful part for fleet planning
The driver screener uses an “archetype” concept built from three core characteristics: (1) fuel type, (2) operating area, and (3) charging time/location. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
| Dimension | How the study defines it | How you should use it operationally |
|---|---|---|
| Fuel type | Non-EV includes petrol/diesel and non-plug-in hybrids; EV-coded includes PHEV, BEV, and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. | Segment your fleet not only by “EV vs ICE”, but by charging dependency and duty-cycle suitability (BEV vs PHEV is not the same operational problem). |
| Operating area | Local / regional / national defined by distance from base (e.g., within 15 miles; 15–50 miles; over 50 miles). | Use this to assign EVs to predictable routes first and to identify which routes require contingency charging plans. |
| Charging time/location | Charging is recorded separately for daytime (7am–8pm) and overnight (8pm–7am). | This is the simplest way to audit charging reality: if “overnight access” is weak, your electrification plan will struggle regardless of vehicle choice. |
4) What the recruitment materials imply about real-world adoption
Both the fleet operator and driver information sheets explicitly frame the research against the UK’s 2030 phase-out timeline for new petrol and diesel vans, and emphasise interest in how government can better support commercial fleets—especially with smart charging technology.
What fleets were actually asked to do
Fleet operators were asked to (1) complete an online survey, (2) potentially take part in a longer interview, and (3) nominate one or two drivers for interviews.
What drivers were asked to do
Drivers were invited to a short interview focused on driving patterns, charging patterns (if applicable), attitudes toward electric vans, and views on smart charging. The recruitment materials specify compensation for time.
5) How to reuse this method inside your fleet (a practical template)
Internal rollout playbookIf you are rolling out electric vans (or scaling from pilots), the fastest way to reduce risk is to run a “mini version” of this research internally. Here is an implementation-friendly approach based on the appendices:
A. Run a 10-minute fleet operator survey equivalent
- Route types and variability (local / regional / national)
- Vehicle dwell windows (how long vans are parked at base, overnight, between jobs)
- Charging access by time-of-day (daytime vs overnight), aligned to the same time windows used in the study
- Current and expected reliance on public charging (and tolerance for downtime)
B. Interview drivers by archetype, not randomly
- Select drivers across fuel types and operating areas (the archetype approach)
- Ask about “what breaks the day” (queueing, detours, payload/range, site access)
- Document workarounds that quietly create cost or risk (e.g., avoiding jobs that would require charging)
C. Decide where smart charging creates immediate value
- If depot capacity is constrained, managed charging can be a capacity multiplier
- If overnight charging is abundant, start with simple scheduling first and move to load management later
- If home charging is required, standardise reimbursement and access rules before adding complexity
FAQ: how to interpret “appendices” correctly
Do the appendices change the main findings?
The appendices do not replace conclusions; they document how the research was conducted—who was recruited, how questions were asked, and how behaviours were classified. For operators, that transparency makes the findings more actionable and easier to replicate internally.
Why is the archetype framework so important?
Because it reflects operational reality: duty cycle, geography, and time-of-day charging access determine success more than general “EV interest.” The screener explicitly structures drivers by fuel type, operating area, and charging time/location.

