It’s been very interesting reading about the Fuuse innovation project to combat bay hogging with East Lothian Council - can you explain a little more about this project?
East Lothian Council have big ambitions to provide attractive charging solutions for people without driveways or a safe place to charge EVs at home. This project was about ensuring the maximum availability of chargers for those who need them, specifically targeting the emerging habit of bay hogging or ICE-ing.
Typically a back office system could only report the status of a charger that is plugged in. The system can see the charger is still in use (whether actively charging or remaining plugged in after a session has ended), however, there was no way to tell if the charger was actually accessible if nothing was connected to the charger.
As part of this project parking sensors were installed in several locations to detect the presence of a vehicle (or other object) obstructing the charging bay. The sensors would then communicate with the Fuuse platform. An alert would then be sent to the Council’s parking management team, whilst the status of chargers would be updated to ‘unavailable’ to drivers searching for available chargers.
The project highlighted how innovations in charging technology could be used to better utilise existing infrastructure.
This innovation project was funded by Transport Scotland and managed by Scottish Enterprise, through the Can Do Innovation Low Carbon Challenge.