With Heliox purchase, Siemens eyes high growth in truck, bus EV chargers - exec


A Siemens logo is pictured on an office building of Siemens AG in Munich May 30, 2014. REUTERS/Lukas Barth/File Photo

LONDON (Reuters) - Siemens expects high double-digit growth in electric chargers for bus fleets and trucks and to be in the top three companies in that rapidly growing global market thanks to the acquisition of Dutch charger maker Heliox, a top executive said.

Speaking ahead of the close of the deal on Thursday, Matthias Rebellius, a board member at Siemens and CEO of the German group's smart infrastructure business, told Reuters that Heliox is "a perfect expansion of our business".

Terms of the deal have not been disclosed.

"Together with Heliox we're now perfectly positioned for EV charging technology end to end across different sectors and segments," he said.

Rebellius added that Heliox has a strong U.S. presence, which is an important market for Siemens.

The Dutch charger maker has developed software to manage charging fleets of vehicles and charger hardware that will also boost Siemens' position in the market, he said.

The company's competitors for chargers for larger vehicles include ABB, Sweden's Vattenfall and ChargePoint.

According to industry estimates cited by Rebellius, the global market for electric bus and truck chargers should see compound annual growth of 45% over the next three years as fleets speed up the transition to zero-emission models.

"There's huge, huge growth and huge potential," Rebellius said. "We are definitely targeting growth rates in the high double digits and we will be... among the top three globally."

(Reporting by Nick Carey; editing by Jason Neely)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Samsung Electronics unit Harman to acquire ZF Group's ADAS business for $1.8 billion
AI data centers are forcing dirty ‘peaker’ power plants back into service
Paramount's new offer for Warner Bros is not sufficient, major investor says
After power outage, San Francisco wonders: Can robot taxis handle a big earthquake?
Amazon's Zoox to recall 332 US vehicles over software error
Uber and Lyft plan to bring robotaxis to London in partnerships with China's Baidu
Vodafone CEO among UK bosses who see AI, cyberattacks as top 2026 risks
China delays plans for mass production of self-driving cars after accident
Malaysian students win gold at International Robot Olympiad with Mars-exploration robot concept
Leica rolls out firmware update for its SL-System and Q3 camera family

Others Also Read