Transition to Electric Vehicles
Policy briefing from a study which explores views on specific actions to improve raw materials supply risks and battery technologies, as well as measures needed to tackle the ethical and sustainability concerns.
Policy briefing from a study which explores views on specific actions to improve raw materials supply risks and battery technologies, as well as measures needed to tackle the ethical and sustainability concerns.

Britain’s ‘road to zero’ aims to attain zero emissions by 2040, but research has exposed barriers to delivering an efficient electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure.
Britain’s Road to Zero strategy’, aims to attain zero emission by 2040 and achieving the Ultra-Low Emission Vehicle (ULEV) standard by 2050, - a move away from the traditional internal combustion engines - ICE to EVs, currently powered by Lithium-Ion batteries. An efficient and sustainable charging infrastructure networks across the UK is vital to achieve this and yet there are currently significant challenges.
Research from the University of Birmingham has explored EV infrastructure network challenges and best practices to improve ULEV uptake. Through global value chain analysis, this project, via interviews included LAs; vehicle manufacturers (OEMs); EV fleet operators; policy think tanks; non-profit organisations; EV policy shapers; academics, energy and raw minerals companies.
Dr Nana O Bonsu, research fellow in Sustainability at Birmingham Business School Lloyds Banking Group Centre for Responsible Business, University of Birmingham.