Wheels

FJORD TRANSIT

FRIGID RAIN IS pounding the granite cobblestones of Aker Brygge on a dreary Oslo Friday morning and the worsening conditions remind me why I left the northern hemisphere in search of warmer climes many years ago. But the wandering nostalgic train of thought is derailed by the arrival of photographer Adam. He’s alighting one of the 139-metre Basto Electric ferries that crisscross the Oslo Fjord, powered by a 4.3MWh (yes – megawatt) battery and dock with robotic fast chargers at either end of their passage. If this was Sydney Harbour, he’d be arriving on a floating antique powered by a pair of 14-litre MTU diesels that chug nearly four litres of dinosaur juice every minute. But this isn’t Australia, this is the world’s leading nation for transport electrification – Norway.

I’m here to explore how a rugged but beautiful fringe of Scandinavian rock home to 5.5 million became the undisputed champion of the electric car with 31 OEMs offering at least one electric model, more than 400,000 EVs rolling on Norwegian roads and a staggering 76 percent of new-car sales representing the pure electric party. If Australia had achieved the same number per capita there would be nearly 2 million EVs Down Under but, as it

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Wheels

Wheels7 min read
Swedish Passage
BMW MAY HAVE defined the sports-sedan class decades ago, but it’s been left chasing Tesla in the electric-four-door stakes. The i4 arrived internationally in 2021, three years after Tesla’s Model 3 single-handedly revived interest in the sedan body s
Wheels6 min read
Diminutive Luxury SUV Is Confused Yet Delightful
LEXUS BREAKTHROUGH Crossover. That’s what the LBX badge on the back of this shapely new small SUV stands for. Coincidentally – following the LFA supercar – the 2024 LBX is only the second production Lexus to wear a three-letter badge. Where the LFA s
Wheels4 min read
The NVES Meteor Is Inbound
So you’re across NVES – the Federal Government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard – and the debate, how Australia is the only country in the developed world besides Russia without a fuel efficiency mandate, and how the final proposed legislation was u

Related Books & Audiobooks