The Tesla Supercharger Network now extends to Scotland, with the first Supercharger EV station north of the border opening at Edinburgh Airport.

The Tesla Supercharger Network now extends to Scotland’s Edinburgh Airport
The toughest part of convincing car buyers that electric cars are a viable alternative to ICE cars (apart from the cost) has been range anxiety and a lack of places to charge your clean, green electric machine.
That has seen the rapid roll-out of a Supercharger Network around the world allowing recharging of Teslas at strategically placed locations so Tesla drivers can plot a route to their destination that allows the electric equivalent of a ‘splash and dash’.
It’s not as convenient as a petrol filling station on every corner, but it’s an approach it’s hard to criticize and one we couldn’t see any traditional car maker being prepared to stump up for.
So far there are 221 Superchargers worldwide, and with the opening of a new one at Edinburgh Airport there are now eight in the UK, making it almost possible to travel the length and breadth of the country in a Tesla and know you can recharge.
Georg Ell, Tesla’s UK Country Director, said:
We’re really pleased to open our first Scottish Supercharger. The location makes travel in and around Edinburgh easy and also enables a route from Edinburgh to both Glasgow and Stirling and beyond.
It’s an exciting time for Tesla in Scotland. There are plans for an Edinburgh store and service centre next year, so watch this space for more activity.
Tesla are planning far more Supercharger stations in the UK, and by the end of next year there will be new charging points across the Midlands and North, East Anglia, down to the South West, in to Wales and Northern Ireland (and the Republic) too.
Perhaps makers of Hydrogen Fuel Cell cars should take a leaf out of Tesla’s book?



Mary McDonnell says
“Perhaps makers of Hydrogen Fuel Cell cars should take a leaf out of Tesla’s book?”
A hydrogen fueling station can be installed anywhere there is electricity and water.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kjGaNGhz1pE
Hydrogen is the future, it’s a better battery that doesn’t weigh 1,300 pounds and go bad one day costing >$20,000 to replace.