• BYD is testing its 1,500 kW megawatt flash charging network.
  • The demo site looks more like a gas forecourt than an EV hub.
  • Fast chargers could transform the appeal and usability of EVs.

BYD isn’t just building electric cars at a frightening pace, it’s now building chargers that make today’s versions look about as powerful as your car’s 12-volt accessory plug. The company has been spotted testing a 1,500 kW flash charging network in Shenzhen, China, and the layout looks suspiciously like a traditional gas station’s.

Instead of the usual lonely bank of DC chargers around a load of parking bays arranged like a regular parking lot, the demo site features liquid-cooled charging guns and T-shaped gantries lined up like fuel pumps so that drivers can pull up, fill up, and pull out without hanging about.

Related: Breakthrough EV Battery Patent Could Charge In Minutes And Cross A Continent

Leaked intel suggests peak outputs of up to 1,500 kW running on a 1,000 V architecture that could potentially add 249 miles (400 km) of range in just 5 minutes. For context, the quickest public chargers in the US and Europe top out around 350 kW, though most push out a lot less, and the majority of EVs can’t even sustain that anyway.

BYD-Use Only, For Now

Access during testing appears limited to select BYD models wearing a Flash Charge badge, including upcoming Tang, Song, Seal, and Denza variants, Car News China says. Charging reportedly starts within about 10 seconds of plugging in, no QR codes or smartphone gymnastics required.

 BYD’s New EV Chargers Are So Fast They’re Arranged Like Gas Station Pumps

Pricing at the demo site was shown at 1.3 yuan per kWh, roughly $0.18, which will come as a shock to Western EV drivers. Plug in to a 360 kW Gridserve charger in the UK, and you’ll be stung for up to £0.89 per kWh. That’s $1.20. Even a feeble 22 kW jolt costs £0.49 ($0.66) per kWh. Buyers of compatible cars are rumored to get 1,000 kWh of free electricity annually, according to the story out of China, though final policy details haven’t been confirmed.

Drive It Like A Gas Car

The real story isn’t just the headline charging speed. It’s what that speed could mean. If you can genuinely add hundreds of miles in minutes, you don’t need a massive 450-mile battery pack. Smaller batteries mean lighter, more affordable cars with better efficiency and sharper performance. And faster charging could make EV ownership feel less like planning a military operation and more relaxed, encouraging drivers to embark on spontaneous journeys.

BYD is said to be targeting more than 4,000 self-operated flash charging stations in China, with partner networks potentially pushing that number far higher. For now, it’s all still internal testing, but it offers a glimpse into how EV ownership might look only a few years from now, not just in China, but around the world.

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