Open EV charging site stack
Fueling and convenience operators could deploy OCPP-compatible chargers, an open-source charging station management system, open EVSE components for smaller sites, and local energy controls to make EV charging less dependent on a single proprietary forecourt or network vendor.
Thesis
Bitcoin / decentralization role
Coordination mechanism
Verification / trust model
Failure modes
- • Commercial sites may still choose bundled vendors for warranty, payment compliance, uptime guarantees, and service response.
- • Open-source charger management creates cybersecurity and operations burdens that many site owners are not staffed to handle.
- • EV charging is only part of Dover Fueling Solutions' market and does not directly replace liquid-fuel, hydrogen, tank-gauging, containment, or forecourt payment hardware.
Adoption path
- • Start with small fleets, workplaces, depots, municipal chargers, and independent convenience stores where owners can tolerate hands-on integration.
- • Standardize OCPP charger profiles, maintenance procedures, security baselines, and local energy-control recipes.
- • Expand to multi-site operators once open CSMS support, payment integrations, and uptime monitoring are good enough for commercial service contracts.
Decentralization fit
7.5/10
Coordination credibility
6.5/10
Implementation feasibility
6.0/10
Incumbent pressure