This EV Charger Could Transform America’s Gas Stations

- New startup aims to make fast charger installs cheaper and easier.
- Integrated battery removes need for major grid infrastructure.
- Adds up to 180 miles of range in as little as eight minutes.
One of the biggest hurdles to electric vehicle adoption is lackluster recharging infrastructure. However, the situation has been improving as the Department of Energy notes there are nearly 17,000 DC fast chargers across the United States.
That being said, there are still wide swaths of the nation with limited access. Kansas, Nebraska and the Dakota’s appear to be in a charging desert, while Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, and Nevada lack charging infrastructure outside of major cities.
More: Trump Administration Rolls Out Updated EV Charger Program
A startup aims to solve this by making EV chargers easy to install at America’s 150,000+ gas stations. Showcased at CES, ElectricFish’s Turbo Charge aims to eliminate the steep costs and complexity involved with adding DC fast chargers.
As they noted, “conventional fast charger installations require utility upgrades that can run north of $150,000 per port and take 12–18+ months to complete.”
That’s cost prohibitive for a number of gas stations and a giant headache on top. To get around this, ElectricFish developed an interesting Squared charger that has a 400 kWh LFP battery pack as well as two 400 kW charging ports.
The integration of a battery into the charger is notable as it does the heavy lifting during vehicle recharging. The battery can then be slowly recharged using a grid connection, which uses “1/10th to 1/3rd of the typical power draw” of a conventional DC fast charger.
This appears to work out to be 30 kW or less, and this means Turbo Charge units can be deployed in 4–6 weeks instead of 12–18 months. The battery also enables the charger to collect energy when prices are low, and then sell it back to utilities when demand is high.
The company also noted the chargers are designed for gas station usage, which means 8–10 minute charging sessions. These quick stops can reportedly add up to 180 miles (290 km) of range, although the exact number can vary by vehicle.
ElectricFish is trying to keep prices low by using a revenue sharing model. As the company explained, gas station owners provide space and a “modest electrical connection,” while they handle hardware and installation. The two then split charging revenue. ElectricFish said this setup “eliminates the upfront capital barrier that has kept most independent gas stations out of the EV charging market.”
It remains to be seen if the idea will catch on, but the firm appears to have the support of Hyundai’s ZER01NE Ventures. They also noted a charger was installed at Hyundai’s California Proving Ground last year and it reportedly “delivered peak charging power through continuous triple-digit temperatures over a multi-month summer program.”

















