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Norway has put like 30 years of efforts into building up impressive electric transmission and EV-charging infrastructure. Check out e.g. these articles:

https://cleantechnica.com/2023/03/08/how-norway-became-the-w...

https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/automotive-and-assembly/...

Also note that the amount of habitable land in Norway is rather limited, so you don't get to drive hundreds of miles over flat highway-friendly terrain, like e.g. in the US Midwest.




> Since more than 82% of EV users in Norway charge their vehicles at home, housing associations can apply for grants that subsidize up to 50 percent of the cost of buying and installing communal chargers.

I'm familiar with parking in your own garage and charging, or parking on the street with no infrastructure, but I don't understand how far away these chargers would be and whether they're usable overnight.


Basically there's communal parking in the housing association's property, you can use the chargers there to charge. It's just a normal parking space, but with a charger.




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