UK Legislation • EV Charging Regulation

Automated and Electric Vehicles Act 2018: Regulatory Report (EV Charging)

This article explains the UK government’s regulatory report on the :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0} (AEVA), focusing on Part 2: Electric Vehicles – Charging. It outlines how the Act underpins smart charging, consumer protection, interoperability, and the national rollout of EV infrastructure.

Published: 19 October 2021 Scope: UK EV charging regulation Policy horizon: Net zero by 2050
Smart charging Consumer experience Regulatory powers

Executive summary

The transition to zero-emission vehicles is central to the UK’s climate, air-quality, and industrial strategy. Transport is the UK’s largest source of greenhouse gas emissions, with cars and vans accounting for approximately 19% of domestic emissions.

The AEVA provides government with powers to ensure that EV charging infrastructure is:

  • Widely available and fit for mass adoption
  • Easy and consistent for consumers to use
  • Technically interoperable and data-enabled
  • Capable of supporting smart, flexible electricity demand
Policy signal: AEVA is deliberately a “power-enabling” Act. It allows government to intervene where markets fail to deliver reliability, openness, or consumer protection at scale.

Introduction: the role of AEVA

The UK aims to end the sale of new petrol and diesel cars and vans, requiring all new vehicles to have significant zero-emission capability from 2030 and to be 100% zero-emission by 2035.

The AEVA has two parts:

Part Focus Purpose
Part 1 Automated vehicles Insurer liability and safe deployment of self-driving technology
Part 2 Electric vehicles – charging Expansion, regulation, and improvement of EV charging infrastructure

This report covers work undertaken under Part 2, which is directly relevant to chargepoint operators, installers, manufacturers, and network planners.

Powers granted under Part 2 of AEVA

The Act enables government, via secondary legislation, to:

  • Improve consumer experience through interoperability, consistent technical standards, and open data on location and availability
  • Reduce range anxiety by requiring infrastructure at strategic locations such as motorway service areas (MSAs)
  • Mandate smart charging by prohibiting the sale of non-compliant private chargepoints

Smart charging requirements include the ability for chargepoints to:

  • Receive, process, and transmit information
  • Adjust charging rates or timing in response to signals
  • Monitor and record energy consumption
  • Comply with cyber and data security requirements
  • Enable remote access and control

Work undertaken during the first reporting period

Consumer experience at public chargepoints

  • Simplifying payment and enabling non-smartphone access
  • Exploring roaming solutions for cross-network access
  • Consulting on reliability targets, including 99% uptime on a fleet-average basis

Large fuel retailers and motorway service areas

While powers exist to mandate provision, government has so far prioritised commercial delivery. Targets include:

  • At least 6 high-powered (150kW+) chargepoints at every MSA by 2023
  • Approximately 2,500 high-powered chargepoints by 2030
  • Approximately 6,000 high-powered chargepoints by 2035

Open data and information for users

  • Opening static and dynamic chargepoint data to the market
  • Considering mandatory use of the OCPI data standard
  • Improving definitions of “available” and fault reporting

Smart chargepoints (Section 15)

Smart charging enables EV demand to shift to periods of low system demand or high renewable generation, reducing network reinforcement costs and benefiting consumers through lower energy prices.

Following consultation, government committed to mandating that all private chargepoints sold in Great Britain must be smart and meet minimum device-level standards.

  • Cyber and data security
  • Grid stability and safety
  • Energy monitoring and control
Strategic direction: Smart charging regulation is phased. Later legislation is expected to extend beyond devices to include operators, aggregators, and suppliers.

Next steps identified in the report

  • Publication of government responses to consultations
  • Introduction of secondary legislation where needed
  • Potential new primary powers to strengthen consumer rights and inclusivity
  • Expansion of smart regulation to other connected energy devices
What this means for industry

The AEVA signals a long-term regulatory trajectory: openness, reliability, accessibility, and smart energy integration are no longer optional. Businesses that design for interoperability, open data, and high uptime are structurally aligned with future regulation.

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