It’s Official: Japan Now has More Electric Car Charging Spots than Gas Stations
One of the first countries in the world to embrace modern electric cars, Japan has long been considered something of a shining example on how electric car rapid charging infrastructure should be implemented.
Japan is blanketed with charging stations. (Photo: ChargeMap)
That massive number of accessible, reliable charging stations combined with lower-power level 2 charging provision — both private and public — now means there are more dedicated charging stations in Japan than there are gas stations.
Far more in fact: over 40,000 says Nissan, versus the 34,000 gas stations currently trading in Japan.
“An important element of the continued market growth is the development of the charging infrastructure,” Joseph G. Peter, Nissan’s chief financial officer, said on a recent conference call with analysts. With two all-electric models now on sale in Japan — the LEAF electric hatchback and e-NV200 electric minivan — the more public and private charging stations there are, the easier both plug-in models are to sell.
Unlike the majority of gas stations in Japan however, the 40,000 electric car charging points quoted by Nissan includes ones in private homes, causing some critics to cry foul. After all, if a charging station is hidden in a privately-owned garage, it isn’t easily accessible to the public.
Yet while we understand that criticism — and it’s why we used an asterisk in our headline — the rise of charger-sharing sites like PlugShare.com means that more people than ever before are offering their private charging station for others to use, either as an altruistic gesture or for cold, hard cash.

Prime Minister Abe likes plug-in cars as well as hydrogen fuel cell cars, but H2 gets the bigger discount.
But while electric car charging stations may now be far more common in Japan than a gas station, the numbers of electric cars on the roads of Japan still represent a tiny proportion of the total cars registered. In order to support more electric cars, Japan’s healthy, robust charging network needs to keep growing and developing, since even with CHAdeMO DC quick charging, speed of refuelling isn’t as quick as it is with a liquid-based fuel like gasoline or diesel.
Then there’s the challenge from hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. While the Japanese government to date has been quite proactive in its support of electric vehicle infrastructure, the current administration is working hard to promote hydrogen fuel cell technology in preference to electric vehicles.

Japan’s public (and private) charging infrastructure is admired around the world.
Despite saying it wasn’t interested in developing a hydrogen fuel cell car any time soon, Nissan has recently signed an agreement to work alongside Toyota and Honda in order to help popularise fuel cell vehicles and a brand-new hydrogen refilling infrastructure.
Which leads us to ask one question: will electric car charging stations in Japan continue to grow with governmental attention turned elsewhere?
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