Windsor·Video

This Detroit street can charge EVs as they drive

Crews have installed what’s billed as the first wireless-charging public roadway in the U.S. for electric vehicles. It’s beneath a street just west of downtown Detroit.

Copper inductive coils allow vehicles with receivers to charge batteries while driving

Watch as this electric road in Detroit charges a van while in motion

12 months ago
Duration 2:22
This isn't just an ordinary road. It can actually charge an electric vehicle — while it is in motion. Stefan Tongur of Electreon explains how this small stretch of road in Detroit charges electric vehicles and shows CBC News how it works.

Crews have installed what's billed as the first wireless-charging public roadway in the U.S. for electric vehicles.

It's beneath a street just west of downtown Detroit.

Copper inductive charging coils allow vehicles equipped with receivers to charge up their batteries while driving, idling or parking above the coils.

The segment of 14th Street will be used to test and perfect the technology ahead of making it available to the public within a few years, according to the Michigan Department of Transportation.

Demonstrations were held Wednesday at Michigan Central innovation district, a hub for advancing technologies and programs that address barriers to mobility. The district also is where Ford is restoring the old Michigan Central train station to develop self-driving vehicles.

A Ford electric vehicle is shown travelling on an electrified road to charge it.
A Ford electric vehicle is shown travelling on an electrified road to charge it. (Electreon)

The technology belongs to Electreon, an Israel-based developer of wireless charging solutions for electric vehicles. The company has contracts for similar roadways in Israel, Sweden, Italy and Germany. The pilot initiative in Michigan was announced in 2021.

"Alongside Michigan's automotive expertise, we'll demonstrate how wireless charging unlocks widespread EV adoption, addressing limited range, grid limitations, and battery size and costs," said Stefan Tongur, Electreon vice president of business development. 

"This project paves the way for a zero-emission mobility future, where EVs are the norm, not the exception."

When a vehicle with a receiver nears the charging segments, the coils beneath the road transfer electricity through a magnetic field, charging the vehicle's battery. The coils only activate when a vehicle with a receiver passes over them.

Tongur told reporters the roadway is safe for pedestrians, motorists and animals.

The state department of transportation and Electreon made a five-year commitment to develop the electric road system and is expected to seek bids to rebuild part of busy Michigan Avenue, where inductive charging will also be installed.

As electric vehicles increase in popularity, the Biden administration has made its plan for half a million EV charging stations a signature piece of its infrastructure goals.

The wireless-charging roadway helps put Michigan and Detroit at the forefront of electric vehicle technology, officials said.