Skip to main content

Electric vehicle charging

The New Zealand government is to sink around US$7.8 million into a five-year project exploring the feasibility of in-road wireless recharging pads for electric vehicles
December 14, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
The New Zealand government is to sink around US$7.8 million into a five-year project exploring the feasibility of in-road wireless recharging pads for electric vehicles


The project is being developed by University of Auckland professors John Boys and Grant Covic, according to a report by the New Zealand Herald newspaper.

The aim is to have 64,000 electric vehicles on roads by 2021, including one-third of government vehicles. Potential buyers of electric vehicles are concerned about distances before having to recharge. The project’s inductive power transfer technology transfers power without cables, using instead the magnetic field between two close points - the same technology that is used in around 70% of the world's LCD screens.

Charging pads of soft composites are buried in asphalt at intersections or on slopes to support power transfer for vehicles travelling uphill.

"Technically, we can do that, but…can we do it cost-effectively, without actually degrading the performance of the road and ensure that the systems we put in the road can survive there for 10 to 30 years?" Covic reportedly said. "That means we have to re-engineer and come up with new science around materials that can survive being in the road."

However, he noted that objects placed in a road often damage the surface.

"All of the different means by which we build roads, these will have an impact on the nature of the design,” he said.

The newspaper said that their project was one of 68 to win a share of the $177 million of funding through the ministry of business, innovation and employment's Endeavour Fund.

Related Content

  • UN Global Road Safety Trust Fund launched
    April 18, 2018
    FIA Foundation has pledged US$10 million to kick start a United Nations Road Safety Trust Fund, launched by Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed. The new fund is intended to encourage road safety action across the globe, using donations to help unlock government and municipal funding and re-focus national road safety budgets towards proven safe system and interventions. The monies will support projects aimed to strengthen road safety management capacities, improvements to road infrastructure and
  • Volvo CE’s Carl Slotte explains the division’s current line-up
    October 11, 2017
    Next year Volvo CE will be testing electric, hybrid and autonomous vehicles in a quarry. Carl Slotte, head of sales for EMEA, says no company by itself will win market share. David Arminas reports from Germany The driver of the charter bus stood outside the hotel in Trier, Germany, and waved at a passing local city bus. “I know the driver,” he told one of the assembled journalists waiting for the group’s ride to the nearby Volvo CE plant. “He is retired but they brought him back because young people th
  • How waste plastic and soybean oil are helping our roads last longer
    April 13, 2018
    A new super-modifier is born from waste plastic in Italy and a soybean-based rejuvenator from the US spreads from its home market. By Kristina Smith The two bitumen technologies featured this month come from almost opposing sources. One emerges from the human-created plastic waste plaguing our planet, the other from a plant. However, both technologies have been created with the same aims: to increase the life of roads, saving cost and ultimately reducing the impact of road building on the planet. A coll
  • MAD about Vitronic in Germany
    April 30, 2025
    Vitronic has supplied two of its latest sensor columns to the project MAD Urban (Managed Automated Driving for Urban Mobility and Logistics) being set up in Braunschweig (Brunswick).