Ex-Tesla team launches UK EV charging company with £60m funding

Three former members of Tesla’s UK Supercharger team have secured £60 million to develop high-powered charging hubs in UK cities. The first site opens in London on 20 August, with 30 hubs planned in the initial phase.

Image: Hubber

The new company is called Hubber and was founded in 2024 by former Tesla executives Harry Fox, Connor Selwood and Hugh Leckie. The team says demand for urban ultra-rapid charging is outstripping supply, particularly among operators of taxis, ride-hailing services, delivery vans, and buses.

As mentioned above, the three were previously part of Tesla’s Supercharger team in the UK and “oversaw delivery of 100+ Tesla Supercharger sites and 1,200+ ultra-rapid chargers nationwide.” However, the Supercharger division was closed in April 2024, prompting them to found their own company, “aiming to solve the UK’s urban charging infrastructure deficit.”

“Early ultra-fast charging focused on motorways and ‘range anxiety’, but today the real pressure is in cities. The fleets doing the most miles – taxis, ride-hail, delivery vans, buses – are electrifying fast, yet city infrastructure is lagging,” emphasised Harry Fox, CEO of Hubber. “Large, high-powered hubs are the key to enabling continuous, efficient and scalable operations, but persistent delays leave a critical shortfall just as demand is surging.”

The young company has now secured 60 million pounds in funding. The investment is led by James Bayliss, former Head Trader at Elliott Advisors (UK), and Christopher Fox, former CFO of the British Business Bank. Hubber plans to use the capital to acquire and develop 30 hubs with a combined 100 MW of grid capacity. The first site will open on 20 August in Forest Hill, south-east London, in partnership with Antin-owned RAW Charging.

Looking ahead, Hubber identifies urban charging deployment challenges, such as limited and costly land, grid constraints, and complex planning and consenting processes. Even established charge point operators face difficulties securing suitable locations. Hubber’s model addresses these hurdles by combining the acquisition of urban land with pre-secured megawatt-scale grid connections. Sites are delivered in a modular format, with planning consent in place, ready for operation by charge point operators or fleet partners.

James Bayliss, lead investor, said: “Urban EV charging remains one of the UK’s biggest infrastructure challenges. This uniquely skilled team now has the capital to address it, and we expect their work to make a significant and lasting impact on the country’s electrification.”

Source: Information per e-mail, hubber-infra.co.uk

8 Comments

about „Ex-Tesla team launches UK EV charging company with £60m funding“
Malcolm Kirk
15.08.2025 um 19:40
That's great but what about rural areas and small towns. Like mobile signals those areas will be forgotten whilst companies will claim nearly 90% coverage!! It's not about range anxiety it's about supporting those areas that have poor or little public transport. I live in Shropshire where you struggle to find 4g let alone 5g and it will be the same with EV charging for decades yet.
Stewie
20.08.2025 um 15:47
In the Cotswolds there is neither a good mobile data signal or EV charging, these things require government to use their fists and mandate infrastructure.
Kevin Heath
16.08.2025 um 16:09
If they can get the cost of charging down to Tesla rates then they will be onto a winner. If they are thinking of ripping people off with 65p to 89p kWh then they can forget about the big users. I'm a taxi driver I charge up at Tesla at 36p kWh and spend approx £120 a week in charging. If they are planning g on charging 72p kWh then I'm not going to lose £120 a week in profit by using them.
Stewie
20.08.2025 um 15:44
That's exactly it! there is already no shortage of price gouging chargers, but anything over £0.50ish per kwh peak and £0.30ish off peak should be boycotted. Charging networks need to be coming down to the 25-30p per kwh off peak targets.
Chander Luther
17.08.2025 um 06:35
I own a plot of land over 3 acres on a prime A6 road between Bedford and Luton which I would like to either lease out or participate in development for such a charging station hub..Please could you get in touch with me to discuss it further?
Chris Glendinning-Smith
17.08.2025 um 08:28
What are numbers around generation and distribution capacity to support the EV rollout?
M
17.08.2025 um 09:19
Yawn all down south again
RossEV
18.08.2025 um 10:52
Like the Alpitronic chargers, hope it's not just coincidence they're stood in front of one...

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