Perusahaan Listrik Negara (PLN), Indonesia’s state-owned electricity provider, has inaugurated what it says is the country’s fastest electric vehicle charging station, developed in partnership with Mega Energi Biru Indonesia (MEBI) and Huawei Digital Power.
The facility, branded Zora Signature, is located in Kabupaten Tangerang in Banten Province, about 25 kilometres southwest of Jakarta. It is the first charging station in Indonesia to offer ultra-fast split charging technology with liquid cooling.
The site is equipped with eight DC ultra-fast chargers providing a total of 12 charging points, along with one AC fast charger. Each DC unit can deliver up to 480 kilowatts of power, while the AC charger offers up to 22 kW.
Huawei Digital Power supplied the DC charging systems, including both liquid-cooled single-connector units and air-cooled Boost models with dual connectors. The high output is designed to support premium electric vehicles with 800-volt architectures, enabling battery charging from 10% to 80% in roughly 20 minutes.
Models capable of utilizing the chargers include vehicles such as the Hyundai Ioniq 5, Kia EV9, Xpeng G6, Xpeng X9 and Zeekr 7X. The station also features customer amenities including a waiting lounge, coffee shop, ATM and a display area showcasing EV charging equipment.
PLN said the project reflects broader efforts to accelerate adoption of electric mobility in Indonesia. “This collaboration demonstrates that by working together, the transformation of electric vehicles to support decarbonization in the transportation sector is possible,” PLN President Director Darmawan Prasodjo said.
MEBI President Commissioner Rahayu Saraswati Djojohadikusumo said the facility signals readiness for faster progress in green transport. “We are not only inaugurating a new service station (SPKLU), but also establishing a direction that Indonesia is ready to move faster, that innovation is our commitment, and that the future of green mobility starts here,” she said.
As of December 2025, PLN and its partners had installed 4,655 public EV charging stations nationwide, underscoring the government’s push to build a comprehensive charging network.
