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EV Charging Still Sucks. This Guy Is Making It Better

EV Charging Still Sucks. This Guy Is Making It Better

The InEVitable Apr 02, 2026 63 min
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About this episode

Seth Cutler, CEO of IONNA (Ion North America), lays out how the OEM-backed charging network is scaling fast—aiming for 100+ sites and nearly 5,000 contracted high-power bays, with ~1,500 more under construction. The big differentiator isn’t just speed (150kW+), but “quality at scale”: canopies, 24/7 bathrooms, lounges, and retail partnerships like Wawa/Sheets plus Amazon Just Walk Out. IONNA supports both CCS and NACS, emphasizes “no app” charging via plug-and-charge/credit card, and focuses investment on cities and corridors to serve apartment dwellers. The episode also tackles why charging has been unreliable, how integrations work across eight automakers, and the business model beyond charging revenue.

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Technical Too Afraid to Ask
Concept

joint venture

"Because they were started by eight car companies... They're a big joint venture. They're a consortium between eight car manufacturers..."

A joint venture is a partnership where companies team up and share money and responsibilities. In this case, multiple car brands are working together on the charging network.

Brand

Toyota

"...Stalantis, and then Toyota joined them a year later. They were the Magnificent Seven and now they're the Elite Eight."

Toyota joined the charging partnership after it started. That can help the network grow faster and reach more drivers.

Concept

sites live

"So I think it leads with how many sites are live now in the Iona network? So the time the release goes out... that week we'll have over 100 sites live..."

“Sites live” means the charging locations are open and working for drivers. It’s a way to measure what you can actually use today.

Company

Tesla Supercharger

"Right. And so the last Tesla supercharger site I was at was in Baker, California, and it was a parking lot with one trash can that was overflowing. And no restrooms or anything like that."

Tesla Superchargers are Tesla’s fast charging stations. The point here is that the “experience” isn’t just how fast you charge—it’s also things like bathrooms and overall site comfort.

Concept

remediate the location

"we picked the most difficult one was a hundred old gas station that we, as we're doing construction, found an old gas tank, had to remediate the location, still get it live within nine months..."

“Remediate” means fix the problem in the ground or on the property before building. Old gas stations can have leftover contamination that has to be cleaned up.

Brand

Ford

"Ford announced that they were going to ditch CCS and go to NACS... everybody else followed the first domino."

Ford is the car company in this story that said it would move toward the NACS charging plug standard. The point is that when a big automaker makes that move, others often follow.

Concept

CCS

"Ford announced that they were going to ditch CCS and go to NACS... And so we can actually go back and we're watching our network in terms of which sites are higher utilization on NACS versus CCS."

CCS is one of the main plug types used for fast charging EVs. If your car supports CCS, it can use chargers with that connector to charge quickly.

Concept

NACS

"Ford announced that they were going to ditch CCS and go to NACS... So you guys said, you hit the ground running and saying NACS... And so all of our sites are 60% NACS, 40% CCS right now."

NACS is a newer charging plug standard that’s closely tied to Tesla’s Supercharger network. If your EV supports NACS, you can use those chargers more easily.

Car

Dodge Charger

"...And then where's the magnetic handle on the NACS charger, does it? We're not seeing that. I mean, I think ..."

The Dodge Charger is a car designed for performance, with a focus on fast driving. When people discuss charging it, they’re usually talking about how the car plugs into a charger and whether it uses a certain connector type. The podcast is specifically questioning whether it has a connector design that uses a magnetic-style handle.

Car

Tesla Roadster

"...dealing with Teslas since like late 2012. And the roadster shirt, yeah, the roadster shirt. But I mean, the..."

The Tesla Roadster is an electric sports car, meaning it runs on electricity instead of gasoline. It’s known for being a high-performance model. The podcast mentions it as part of Tesla-related experience and references to the Roadster.

Car

Tesla Model S

"...shirt, yeah, the roadster shirt. But I mean, the Model S, you know, that was, we were very deep into that...."

The Tesla Model S is an electric car that’s built like a luxury sedan. Instead of using gasoline, it uses a battery and an electric motor. The podcast is mentioning it because it was a big focus during their Tesla experience.

Concept

terrible uptime

"The terrible uptime, right? You would show up at a charger and the handles busted or the card just didn't work."

Uptime just means whether the charger is working when you get there. If uptime is bad, you show up and the charger won’t work, so you can’t charge.

Company

EA

"Tesla was really the first one that said, Hey, we're going to build a national network, EA followed suit after that."

EA (Electrify America) is a company that runs fast-charging stations. They’re brought up as part of the shift toward a bigger, more consistent charging network.

Concept

canopies

"That's why we're doing canopies. That's why we're building amenities."

A canopy is basically a roof over the charging spot. It helps keep you dry or out of the sun while you wait for your car to charge.

Concept

anchor tenant

"It may not have an anchor tenant, meaning... we sometimes we bought land and we'll have it adjacent to a Starbucks or a donut shop..."

An “anchor tenant” is a major business (like a retailer) that draws customers and makes a site more attractive. The speaker uses it to explain how some charging locations rely on nearby established destinations for amenities rather than building everything themselves.

Company

Wawa

"we will partner with a Wawa, big on the East Coast, the Sheets, the Casey's, General's."

Wawa is a convenience-store and food retailer commonly used as an “anchor tenant” for EV charging sites. The speaker is describing a site model where charging is paired with a well-known retail location to improve convenience and foot traffic.

Concept

permitting and zoning

"I would agree with the exception again about where we can and where it's possible from a permitting and from a zoning perspective. We've got canopies on top of these locations."

Permitting and zoning are the local rules for building. They can limit where chargers can go and what the site can look like.

Brand

Shell

"Are you working with like a major like petroleum, like a, like a mobile or a shell or any. In terms of like the actual electricity?"

Shell is a major petroleum company that’s moving into EV charging through branded programs like Shell Recharge. The segment uses Shell as an example of how traditional fuel players are partnering or deploying chargers.

Concept

footprint

"we've been focused on getting kind of the footprint, right? And then, and using that as a foundation or platform to build on top of."

“Footprint” in this context means the physical network of charging locations—how many sites exist and where they’re placed. The speaker suggests building the charging network first, then layering additional brand experiences and services on top.

Concept

apartment dwellers who cannot charge at home

"EV adoption. You also have tons and tons of apartment dwellers who cannot charge at home."

A lot of people live in apartments and can’t put a charger in their parking spot. So they have to rely on public charging instead.

Term

electrified America

"I live .8 miles from one electrified America location."

Electrify America is a company that puts fast chargers in public places. Even near their stations, the speaker is still running into trouble charging.

Concept

unlock that part of the market

"the consumer... the folks are going to start buying EVs to unlock that part of the market."

“Unlock that part of the market” means removing barriers so more consumers are willing to buy EVs. In this context, better charging access—especially for people who can’t charge at home—is what makes EV ownership more appealing.

Company

EV Go

"but I do talk to like EV Go or, you know, Electron America."

EVgo is a company that runs public fast chargers for EVs. The point here is that the network has grown a lot over time.

Company

ChargePoint

"we actually have, you know, a mobile app right now across all eight investors. We have, we have Roaming with ChargePoint, right?"

ChargePoint is a company that runs EV charging stations. “Roaming” here means you can use access/payment across networks more easily.

Concept

EMSP

"So what's an EMSP? An Electric Mobility Service Provider. So something that has an app is essentially an EMSP."

An EMSP is basically the company that runs the EV charging service you use. They handle things like your account and how your car gets authorized to charge.

Concept

test lab

"we have a full test lab and a full engineering team that work a lot of hours testing and debugging... we actually have a lab at our Raleigh HQ. And then we have eight other labs."

A test lab is a place where they try charging setups in controlled conditions. The goal is to catch problems before real customers plug in and the system fails.

Concept

power line communication (PLC)

"Right. There's actual high level power line communication occurring PLC between the car and the charger makes sure no one gets hurt. You're talking about 400 kilowatts."

It’s like the car and the charger “talk” to each other using the charging cable. They exchange safety and control information before any big power starts flowing. That conversation helps prevent dangerous mistakes.

Concept

kilowatt-hour

"Okay. And there's another discount, which is when you open a new location, 20 cents per kilowatt hour, right? Yeah."

A kilowatt-hour (kWh) is basically “how much electricity” you used. If charging costs $X per kWh, your bill depends on how many kWh your car took in.

Concept

utilization

"we did our second anniversary, we partnered with our OEM friends, and they went out and said, hey, Iona's turning two, you go try them out. And we saw a 2x increase that day on utilization."

Utilization means how often the chargers get used. If more people charge there, the network is working better and can grow.

Concept

OEMs

"...you'll start seeing us work more closely with our OEM friends, investors, partners..."

OEMs are the actual car makers. In this context, they’re important because charging networks want to work with the brands so customers know where they can charge.

Concept

multi-generational product plan roadmap

"So, we're constantly understanding, hey, what's on the time rise and what's on your multi-generational product plan roadmap? Where should we intersect?"

A multi-generational roadmap is a long-term plan that accounts for multiple future vehicle and product “generations,” such as new battery designs and charging standards. The transcript implies charger partners align their hardware and software updates with what future EVs will be able to accept.

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