GreenWay has expanded its fast-charging network in Eastern Europe, commissioning new sites in Slovakia and Poland under the European Union–backed Expand-E infrastructure programme, the company said.
In Slovakia, GreenWay added 20 new fast-charging locations, including three hubs designed to accommodate electric heavy-duty vehicles. In Poland, the operator commissioned a further 48 charging parks, some of which are also suitable for electric trucks, strengthening coverage along major transport routes.
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The rollout forms part of the Expand-E project, which aimed to deploy 260 fast-charging stations with a total of 1,013 charging points along the EU’s TEN-V transport network. The initiative included chargers with a minimum output of 150 kilowatts for passenger electric vehicles and 46 additional high-capacity charging points of at least 350 kilowatts for electric commercial vehicles across nine European countries, including Poland and Slovakia.
GreenWay was among several companies to receive EU funding for the project, alongside Grid Telecom, Ionity, Renovatio Asset Management and Fortisis. The operator received €4.71 million to support its expansion in Slovakia and €10.47 million for new sites in Poland, although it did not disclose total investment figures for either country.
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The company said the Expand-E project has now been completed and that all planned charging infrastructure is fully operational. GreenWay said its activities over the past three years had made a “significant contribution” to the expansion of high-power charging infrastructure in the region.
In Slovakia, the newly commissioned hubs include 46 high-power chargers providing 90 charging points with capacities of up to 400 kW. Three sites — Senec, Žilina and Veľké Bierovce — are equipped to support charging for electric trucks. In Poland, GreenWay established 35 new charging hubs featuring 139 fast chargers and 253 charging points with outputs ranging from 150 kW to 400 kW, supplemented by 13 additional locations offering 26 charging points of up to 200 kW.
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“GreenWay’s ultra-fast charging hubs meet the real needs of electric vehicle drivers,” said Michal Mydlo, managing director of GreenWay Slovakia. “With high charging capacities and well-designed infrastructure, electric trucks can also be charged during drivers’ mandatory breaks without disrupting schedules. This marks an important step towards zero-emission logistics.”
GreenWay said it is already working on the deployment of megawatt charging system (MCS) technology, which is expected to be critical for long-haul electric trucking. Together with E.ON and Voltix, GreenWay is participating in the HDV-E infrastructure project, which aims to install around 330 megawatt charging points along Europe’s main freight corridors by autumn 2028.
