In last year’s Georgia State of Electric Mobility 2025 report, our inaugural whitepaper and first edition in this annual series, we framed the market as one defined by rapid acceleration and the early stages of a dramatic reordering in the global automotive industry, as electric vehicles began to scale and reshape competitive dynamics. That underlying trajectory remains intact. What has fundamentally changed over the past year is the structure of the market itself.
Charging Infrastructure Roadmap Pt.1
This series provides a data-driven view of Georgia’s public charging network and its evolution within the broader Southeast mobility ecosystem. Georgia currently has the most extensive public charging network in the Southeast region, leading in both total coverage and per-capita access. Yet this rapid growth has not been fully comprehensive, underscoring the need for new tools and insights to guide equitable, reliable, and consumer-centered deployment.
As electrification accelerates, EV fire safety remains a critical yet overlooked dimension of readiness; particularly in the United States, where current policy frameworks are not equipped to address the complexity and urgency of emerging fire risks. This white paper highlights emerging best practices, identifies critical policy gaps, and issues a call to action for globally coordinated, forward-looking standards that can support safe, scalable EV adoption worldwide.
Electric vehicles (EVs) are driving one of the most important technological shifts of the 21st century. As governments, fleets, and other consumers and stakeholders begin to transition to emerging technologies, EVs are expected to account for over half of all new car sales globally by 2030. To keep pace with EV growth, fire safety can no longer be an afterthought.
Electric mobility is rapidly reshaping the future of global transportation. To continue on this breakout path of new industry momentum, Georgia must strategically expand its electric mobility innovation and manufacturing ecosystem while addressing gaps in research and development, infrastructure, workforce development, and the supply chain.




