One of the major challenges for the new energy-mobility nexus is to bring several industrial sectors together. Specifically, as electric mobility ramps up, energy and mobility stakeholders need to converge to a common set of systems and the way they interface. This is not only about technology, but also relates to business models, regulations and policies. For example, when a public transport operator switches from internal combustion to electric propulsion, it is reliant on new sources of energy and new alternatives will be offered to integrate its network within the urban environment. Conversely, electricity providers will suddenly need to support new forms of ‘take-out’ from their network.
At present, the process of stakeholder cooperation is not yet laid down. As such, the risk is that not only the vehicle and the supporting energy infrastructure are not optimized, but also that they do not work together as one cohesive system. Without closer collaboration, the likely result is expensive retrofits at a later stage, which is not sustainable.