
The eastern district of Saint-Rambert on the street@A7Traffic from July 18 will offer 2 electric charging stations for refrigerators. It is an economical, ecological and quiet alternative to noisy and polluting diesel generators. https://t.co/YF2YFVSF5Q
— VINCI Autoroutes (@VINCIAutoroutes) July 11, 2022
Things have skyrocketed over the past few months. Of course, the price of fuel even exceeded the mark of 2 euros, as well as customs duties and spare parts. But that’s not all, because the price of electricity also literally skyrocketed, which obviously directly affected the amount of charging for electric car users. If it still costs less to charge the battery of your connected vehicle than to charge a thermal car, it’s not as exciting as it was a few years ago. Indeed, charging station operators are also forced to raise prices, e.g You are here, but not only.
This German motorist drove over 1.6 million km in his Tesla Model S, is it really possible? https://t.co/7Rt6zEmXwx
— AutoPlus (@AutoPlusMag) July 15, 2022
Sharp rise
Allego, well-established in France, will also be forced to revise its prices upwards. As she explained in a press release, “ due to the constant increase in electricity prices in Europe, we are forced to change tariffs more often“. And it is not for nothing that the company already raised the prices of its terminals on September 1. From October 7, so charging will cost even more. Indeed, you will have to deal with an increase of 20% on average, with prices that vary depending on the type of terminal and the power of the recharge.
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New tariffs
The AC terminals 22 kW will increase by 60 cents per kWh against 50 cents until now. For their part, customers who connect their car to the 50 kW high-speed terminals will have to pay 88 cents per kWh, up from 69 cents. Finally, super fast charging above 50kW now costs 98 cents per kWh, up from 79 cents previously. Hoping these prices don’t go up too often…
There is an exception to the end of sales of diesel cars in 2035, voted by the European Parliament: luxury cars (Ferrari, etc.). Of course, there are not many of them, so emissions will be limited, but for the symbol and social justice will have to be ironed pic.twitter.com/6gPS9lc6ZE
— Audrey Garric (@audreygarric) June 9, 2022
Source: Auto Plus

Robert is an experienced journalist who has been covering the automobile industry for over a decade. He has a deep understanding of the latest technologies and trends in the industry and is known for his thorough and in-depth reporting.