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Police vehicle on rural Welsh road
Free White Paper · April 2026 Wales · Blue Light Special Report

Blue Light,
Black Spot

EV infrastructure gaps, broadband failures, and operational geography intersecting to create risk for Welsh blue light fleets. 1,792,247 postcodes analysed across 40 variables.

Worst SA43 to nearest A&E
25.3mi
Ceredigion avg to nearest rapid
5.8mi
Carmarthenshire below 2Mbit/s
4.06%
Welsh LAs analysed
22
Ofcom Connected Nations NHS ODS Welsh Government ONS IMD StatsWales WIMD DVLA VEH0132 DfT NaPTAN ONSPD May 2025 Police.uk OpenStreetMap
About This Report

Where the infrastructure gap becomes a blue light problem

Wales is electrifying its blue light fleets under Welsh Government net zero commitments. But across mid and west Wales, the charging infrastructure is not ready for what is being asked of it. This report maps where EV charging gaps, broadband failures, and emergency service operational geography converge.

SA43
Cardigan, Ceredigion

The most isolated charging blackspot in Wales. The worst-case postcode is 25.3 miles from the nearest Major A&E. Gigabit broadband availability is zero. Most postcodes sit in IMD decile one. A Welsh Ambulance Service vehicle operating from Cardigan must charge at Carmarthen or Haverfordwest before or after a shift.

25.3mi
Nearest Major A&E
19.9mi
Nearest Rapid Charger
0%
Gigabit Availability
Ceredigion
Mid Wales

The highest average distance to a rapid charger of any Welsh local authority at 5.8 miles across 3,082 postcodes. Also the highest average distance to a fire station at 3.4 miles and a hospital at 7.2 miles. The three worst infrastructure figures in Wales converge in the same county.

5.8mi
Avg Nearest Rapid
7.2mi
Avg Nearest Hospital
3.4mi
Avg Nearest Fire Stn
Powys
Mid Wales

The largest county in Wales by area averages 5.5 miles to the nearest rapid charger across 6,117 postcodes, with fewer than one rapid charger within 5 miles on average. Welsh Ambulance Service rural response already involves the longest patient transport distances in Wales. Adding charging logistics compounds an already stretched operation.

5.5mi
Avg Nearest Rapid
0.65
Avg Rapids within 5mi
6,117
Postcodes
Isle of Anglesey
North Wales

Despite being a geographically bounded island with a single main road corridor, Anglesey averages 12.0 miles to the nearest police station — the worst figure in Wales. With 1.27 rapids within 5 miles on average, a North Wales Police vehicle operating an electric vehicle on Anglesey faces both charging constraints and the longest response distances to backup.

12.0mi
Avg Nearest Police Stn
3.0mi
Avg Nearest Rapid
1.27
Avg Rapids within 5mi
Carmarthenshire
West Wales

4.06 percent of premises cannot receive 2Mbit/s broadband, the worst figure in Wales, and a direct threat to the connectivity modern chargepoints require for payment processing and remote monitoring. A chargepoint without adequate broadband is operationally compromised from the moment it is installed.

4.06%
Below 2Mbit/s
4.0mi
Avg Nearest Rapid
5.6mi
Avg Nearest Police Stn
Crymych
SA43, Pembrokeshire border

The nearest fire station to the worst-case SA43 postcodes is Crymych at 9.8 miles, a retained on-call station where crew must travel to the station before any vehicle moves. An electric fire engine returning low on charge to Crymych has no local recovery option. The infrastructure gap is geographic and it is measurable.

9.8mi
Worst SA43 to Fire Stn
Retained
Station Type
0%
Gigabit Availability
The Cardigan Cluster

SA43: Where every metric fails at once

No other postcode area in Wales presents the same combination of charging gap, hospital distance, broadband failure, and deprivation. The data is verified against NHS facility data, Welsh Government fire station records, and Ofcom residential coverage files.

PostcodeNearest Major A&EA&E distNearest RapidNearest Fire StationGigabitIMD Decile
SA43 1PUWithybush, Haverfordwest25.3mi19.9miCrymych 9.8mi0%1
SA43 1QAWithybush, Haverfordwest25.0mi19.9miCrymych 9.4mi0%1
SA43 1PZWithybush, Haverfordwest24.9mi19.9miCrymych 9.3mi0%1
SA43 1PXWithybush, Haverfordwest24.8mi19.8miCrymych 9.3mi0%1
SA43 1PSWithybush, Haverfordwest24.7mi19.8miCrymych 9.2mi0%1
SA43 2QTGlangwili, Carmarthen18.1mi20.2miCardigan 4.8mi0%2
SA43 2QUGlangwili, Carmarthen18.0mi20.1miCardigan 4.8mi0%2
SA43 2QWGlangwili, Carmarthen18.3mi20.4miCardigan 5.0mi0%1
SA43 1JXGlangwili, Carmarthen20.0mi20.1miCrymych 7.1mi0%5
SA43 1PAGlangwili, Carmarthen19.8mi19.9miCrymych 7.8mi0%1
The Mid-Wales Corridor

Three forces, one corridor, no infrastructure

Ceredigion, Powys, and Carmarthenshire form a contiguous corridor across mid and west Wales where EV charging infrastructure, broadband connectivity, and emergency service access are simultaneously at their weakest. This is not coincidence. It reflects decades of underinvestment that now creates compounding risk as fleet electrification accelerates.

The force areas most exposed are Dyfed-Powys Police and Welsh Ambulance Service NHS Trust. Dyfed-Powys covers the four local authorities with the highest average distances to rapid chargers in Wales. Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service covers 4,500 square miles — the largest fire service area in England and Wales — with the majority of its 58 stations crewed by retained on-call firefighters.

Wales does not have access to the Local Electric Vehicle Infrastructure fund, which is an England-only programme. EV charging is funded through the Regional Transport Grant and must compete within a broader envelope. In 2026 to 2027, the entire South East Wales region received just £50,000 for ULEV activity.

Key Finding

Ceredigion has the highest average distance to a rapid charger, the highest average distance to a hospital, and the highest average distance to a fire station of any Welsh local authority. Three compounding failures in the same county.

Avg distance to nearest rapid charger by LA

Ceredigion
5.8mi
Powys
5.5mi
Gwynedd
4.2mi
Carmarthenshire
4.0mi
Pembrokeshire
3.6mi
Conwy
3.4mi
Isle of Anglesey
3.0mi
Cardiff
0.9mi
Full Local Authority Data

Wales by local authority

All 22 Welsh local authorities across charging infrastructure, broadband connectivity, hospital distance, fire station distance, police station distance, and deprivation. Sorted by average distance to nearest rapid charger.

LAAvg Nearest RapidRapids within 5miGigabit %No 2Mbit/s %Avg HospitalAvg Fire StnAvg PoliceIMD
Ceredigion5.8mi1.1149.8%3.27%7.2mi3.4mi5.0mi5.8
Powys5.5mi0.6554.2%3.65%5.0mi2.9mi6.4mi6.5
Gwynedd4.2mi0.7860.0%1.39%4.4mi2.5mi4.9mi6.1
Carmarthenshire4.0mi1.1754.2%4.06%4.3mi2.7mi5.6mi5.3
Pembrokeshire3.6mi1.7557.9%1.93%6.3mi2.7mi5.1mi5.9
Conwy3.4mi0.7877.9%1.45%2.9mi1.7mi4.0mi6.0
Rhondda Cynon Taf3.3mi0.8274.2%0.06%2.0mi1.4mi2.0mi4.6
Isle of Anglesey3.0mi1.2756.3%1.29%4.4mi2.3mi12.0mi5.9
Bridgend2.9mi1.7884.7%0.26%1.8mi1.2mi2.3mi5.5
Monmouthshire2.6mi1.6466.2%1.32%3.3mi2.1mi1.8mi7.2
Neath Port Talbot2.6mi1.3577.8%0.08%2.1mi1.5mi2.9mi4.2
Caerphilly2.4mi1.6283.3%0.16%2.8mi1.5mi1.3mi4.9
Denbighshire2.4mi2.5477.1%1.16%2.5mi1.5mi2.0mi5.6
Torfaen2.4mi2.5178.0%0.23%1.8mi0.9mi1.3mi4.8
Blaenau Gwent2.0mi1.2666.9%0.11%1.3mi1.0mi1.0mi3.3
Flintshire1.9mi2.0988.2%0.40%2.3mi1.8mi3.6mi6.7
Merthyr Tydfil1.9mi1.7673.1%0.08%1.9mi1.2mi1.1mi3.8
Wrexham1.9mi3.5772.6%0.36%2.0mi2.5mi2.1mi6.1
Swansea1.6mi3.6085.3%0.37%1.6mi1.5mi1.5mi5.9
Cardiff0.9mi10.2792.5%0.05%1.1mi1.3mi1.1mi5.8
Newport0.8mi10.2391.4%0.01%1.3mi1.3mi0.9mi4.7
Vale of Glamorgan1.4mi1.7884.7%0.26%1.8mi1.4mi1.3mi5.5
What Needs to Happen

Actions for government, operators and fleet managers

01
Commission a blue light fleet charging needs assessment

Welsh Government and Transport for Wales should commission a dedicated assessment for the Dyfed-Powys and Gwynedd operational areas. The analysis in this report provides a postcode-level baseline. What is needed now is a station-by-station assessment of grid capacity, DNO connection requirements, and the realistic cost of bringing rapid charging to the locations where emergency services actually operate.

02
Reflect Welsh funding reality in any policy response

Wales does not have access to the Local Electric Vehicle Infrastructure fund. EV charging is funded through the Regional Transport Grant and must compete within a broader envelope. In 2026 to 2027, the entire South East Wales region received just £50,000 for ULEV activity. Any recommendation that assumes English-style ring-fenced infrastructure investment will not translate to the Welsh context.

03
Electrify by role, not by vehicle count

Emergency service fleet managers should map all operational station locations against charging infrastructure data before committing to EV procurement in rural force areas. Non-emergency pool vehicles first. Community response vehicles second. Rapid response vehicles only once infrastructure within operational range is confirmed. Range calculations must reflect worst-case duty cycles, not average ones.

04
Treat mid-Wales as an underserved commercial opportunity

Chargepoint operators should treat the mid-Wales corridor as an underserved market with growing demand signals. EV density in Carmarthenshire and Powys is rising. Public-private partnership models with emergency services offer guaranteed utilisation in locations where general public footfall is low. A chargepoint with a committed blue light fleet user is a viable asset in a rural location where a purely commercial deployment is not.

05
Resolve broadband before deploying chargepoints

A chargepoint without adequate fixed broadband is operationally compromised from the moment it is installed. In Ceredigion and Carmarthenshire, where several percent of premises cannot receive 2Mbit/s, connectivity is a co-dependency that must be resolved alongside charging infrastructure. Any site survey in these areas must assess broadband availability before capital is committed.

Data
All data from government and statutory sources

Every figure in this analysis derives from Ofcom, ONS, DVLA, NHS ODS, Welsh Government, and verified open data. Hospital locations are verified against NHS facility postcodes. Fire station locations are from the Welsh Government 2023-24 dataset with British National Grid coordinates. Police station locations are from OpenStreetMap, manually verified against force websites. All sources are licensed under the Open Government Licence v3. EVInsight is an ICO Registered Data Controller (ZC106985).

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Published April 2026 · EVInsight · evinsight.co.uk · ICO ZC106985