HomeOther Energy Applications ›EMO Energy to Expand Last-Mile EV Charging Network to 5,000+ Fast Chargers by HY27

EMO Energy to Expand Last-Mile EV Charging Network to 5,000+ Fast Chargers by HY27

EMO Energy has announced plans to scale its fast-charging network to more than 5,000 chargers by HY27, aiming to strengthen last-mile EV infrastructure for commercial two-wheelers in India.

March 31, 2026. By News Bureau

EMO Energy, a battery technology and charging infrastructure company focused on commercial electric mobility, announced plans to expand its fast-charging network to more than 5,000 chargers by HY27. The move marks a significant step in strengthening last-mile EV infrastructure for commercial two-wheelers, where uptime, reliability, and charging speed are critical to daily operations.

The company currently operates over 1,500 fast chargers designed specifically for commercial two-wheelers. These chargers are engineered to support EMO Energy’s proprietary battery system, ZenPac, enabling batteries to charge up to 80 percent in just 20 minutes, spread across the day. The network is built to serve the high-frequency needs of fleet operators, delivery riders, and last-mile mobility businesses that depend on rapid turnaround and predictable access to charging.

EMO Energy’s infrastructure is positioned around real-world fleet use cases. Its network is deployed across dark stores and high-traffic delivery corridors, enabling quick charging sessions of around five minutes between deliveries and helping riders return to the road faster. The company’s integrated battery-and-charging ecosystem is designed to offer consistency, compatibility, and long-term performance for commercial operations.

“Commercial EV adoption will only scale when charging becomes as seamless and reliable as refueling,” said Sheetanshu Tyagi, Co-founder, EMO Energy.

“At EMO Energy, we are building infrastructure around the actual needs of last-mile fleets, fast turnaround, predictable performance, and high utilisation. Our goal is to remove the operational friction that slows down commercial EV adoption and create a charging backbone that supports scale at every level,” added Tyagi.

As India’s last-mile logistics sector continues to expand across e-commerce, quick commerce, and delivery services, the demand for dependable EV infrastructure is rising sharply. EMO Energy believes that fast, accessible, and fleet-focused charging will be essential to improving unit economics, rider productivity, and the broader scalability of electric two-wheelers in commercial applications.
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