Sweden awards Smartroad Gotland and Electreon a test road in Visby

Swedish inductive road consortium Smartroad Gotland has won a contract to convert 1.6km of road around Visby into an electric vehicle demonstration bed. The award by Sweden’s government transport administration agency Trafikverket covers a route used by buses and is also popular with logistics vehicle drivers between Visby Airport and central Visby. The former Hanseatic city, with a population around 25,000, is on the island of Gotland and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1995. Visby joins
April 17, 2019
(Photo courtesy Electreon) - 2.png
The electrified track will be around 8cm under the asphalt running along the centre of the lane (photo courtesy Electreon)
Swedish inductive road consortium Smartroad Gotland has won a contract to convert 1.6km of road around Visby into an electric vehicle demonstration bed.


The award by Sweden’s government transport administration agency 1096 Trafikverket covers a route used by buses and is also popular with logistics vehicle drivers between Visby Airport and central Visby. The former Hanseatic city, with a population around 25,000, is on the island of Gotland and has been a 1384 UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1995.

Visby joins the city of Lund in what Trafikverket is calling a pre-commercial knowledge tender to set up pilot projects of electrified roads. The goal of both projects is for Trafikverket to gain knowledge about the environmental and commercial viability of such electric roads. Cost of the project is around US$12.5 million.

“We believe that electric roads are an important contribution to reducing CO²-emissions from heavy transportation,” said Jan Pettersson, programme manager at Trafikverket. “Demonstrating and evaluating new technical solutions for electric routes is one of our most important steps in our long-term plan for a potential rollout of electrified routes on the heavy road network in Sweden.”

The Israeli technology company Electreon, a wholly owned subsidiary of Electreon Wireless, will lead the project’s next phase to provide a dynamic wireless mobile power transfer system embedded in the pavement along 1.6km of the 4km route. The company says that the public-private initiative will be the first in the world to charge inductively both an electric truck and and an electric bus while in full motion.


The consortium said that long-haul heavy trucks benefit significantly from the Electreon’s solution since no heavy and costly batteries - nor stops for charging - are needed. After acquiring demonstration results, Trafikverket can evaluate the potential for investing in larger electric road infrastructure.

Other companies in the Smart Road Gotland consortium include Dan Transport, a major Israeli bus operator and a strategic investor in Electreon. Dan will provide a Higer E-Bus based on Supercapacitor.

Hutchinson, a major French manufacturer, will manufacture the underground coils that will be 8cm under the road surface and activated only when specially equipped vehicles travel over top of it.

The system is compatible with all types of electric vehicles, according to Electreon, including buses, trucks, passenger cars and self-driving vehicles. A typical passenger car can be equipped with just one 12kg receptor for picking up the electric current. Meanwhile, heavier vehicles such as logistics trucks can have more than one receptor to optimise charging levels.

More information can be found on the <%$Linker:2External<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary />000link-external websitefalsehttps://www.electreon.com/technologyfalsefalse%> of Electreon.

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