Electric Vehicles

Australia’s first commercial EV fast-charging stations rolled out in Qld

Published by

Australia’s first commercial electric vehicle charging stations are being rolled across five sites in Queensland, using the state’s home-grown Veefil fast charger technology by Brisbane company Tritium.

The stations, the first of which has been installed at the Noosa Blue Resort in Noosa Heads, are being developed by ASX-listed energy retailer Locality Planning Energy, and will offer electric vehicle battery recharging at a rate 25 times faster than a standard home charger, but for the same cost.

Veefil® Electric Vehicle Fast Charger

LPE says the stations will also be the the first in Australia to sell electricity to an EV at a rate cheaper on a km-to-km basis than fuel for a traditional combustion engine vehicle.

The retailer says drivers will pay for the exact amount of electricity used to recharge their vehicles, making it as cost effective as home charging.

A dedicated mobile phone app will also allow drivers to check the charging station’s availability, reserve a space and monitor their car’s charging progress.

“The charging station marks an exciting development for electric vehicles owners and we are thrilled to combine the power of Tritium’s cutting-edge and award winning technology with our embedded electricity network to make charging faster, easier and more cost effective than ever before,” said LPE director and CEO Damien Glanville.

“With advanced infrastructure that makes EV charging more convenient and accessible, we hope to accelerate the adoption of EVs across Australia and enable greater flexibility for drivers.

“Trips between Noosa and Brisbane (140km / 87miles) are now possible and journeys to further destinations will soon be a reality.”

For Tritium, the LPE project is another feather in its cap; the company was recently announced as the first beneficiary of the Queensland government’s $40 million Business Development Fund, with an investment of $2.5 million towards producing an even higher power Veefil unit, that can give EVs as much as 150km of range per 10 minutes of charge.

It has had considerable success in overseas markets including New Zealand and California, and has tripled its manufacturing capability, with the move to a new, larger high-tech production facility.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Turbines and transmission towers up and concrete foundations poured at rare state-owned wind farm

State-owned wind farm marks a "huge few weeks of milestones" including delivery of transformers, erection…

13 July 2026

One of Australia’s biggest renewables developers seeks to build one of country’s biggest new gas plants

Plans for one of the nation's biggest new gas plants join the queue for federal…

13 July 2026

Regulator bans two solar and battery installers for failing to meet standards and regulations

Regulator says two individuals banned from installing solar PV and home batteries under the SRES…

13 July 2026

Andrew Forrest’s Squadron Energy unveils another big wind project near crowded renewable zone

Squadron's latest wind project located just outside of crowded renewable zone, and will seek to…

13 July 2026

“We can save at least 20 pct:” Developers rethink how they build giant wind projects

Developers say splitting up EPC contracts for giant wind projects is saving money and lowering…

13 July 2026

Starting from scratch on nuclear in Australia would take longer, cost more than first-time offshore wind

CSIRO says nuclear power is "most expensive in each case" of its modelling, with a…

13 July 2026