BYD starts deploying its ultra-fast network in overseas markets

The Chinese car giant BYD shared a bold plan to build a massive "Flash Charging" network. Li Yunfei, a top manager at the company, says this technology will head to international markets by the end of 2026. It seems BYD wants to be more than a car company - it now wants to own the "gas stations" of the future too. The goal is quite something - to make charging an EV feel as quick as a coffee break.

The secret to this speed is in a clever design. Each charging pile is not just a plug - it is also a giant battery. These piles store between 200 and 300 kWh of energy. By storing electricity on-site, the chargers do not have to pull all their power from the city's electric grid at once. This prevents the local power lines from getting overwhelmed when many people charge at the same time. It is a smart way to build a high-speed network without needing to rebuild the entire city's wiring.

BYD is working on a tight schedule. By December 2026, the company plans to have 20,000 of these stations running across China. Most of these, about 18,000 sites, will be built inside existing locations through partnerships. This strategy helps BYD put chargers where people already go. In big cities, the company wants drivers to be within 5 km of a charger 90% of the time. The rest of the 2,000 stations will sit along major highways.

As of early March 2026, the company has already finished 4,239 stations. BYD expects to have the first 1,000 highway stations ready for drivers before May 1, 2026. These chargers are incredibly powerful - they use a 1,500 kW system that operates at 1,000V.

When you pair these chargers with BYD's new cars, the results are impressive. Vehicles like the Denza Z9 GT and the Yangwang U7 have the second-generation Blade Battery. On a Flash Charging pile, these electric cars can go from 10% to 70% battery in just 5 minutes. Even a nearly full charge from 10% to 97% only takes about 9 minutes under normal conditions.

Cold weather usually makes electric cars charge much slower, but BYD claims it has fixed that problem. They tested the new battery system in extreme cold. After sitting in -30°C weather for an entire day, the battery could still charge from 20% to 97% in only 12 minutes. This is a big deal for drivers in places like Northern Europe or North America, where winter usually makes EV charging a chore.

BYD is pushing this technology because its business is growing rapidly outside of China. In February 2026, the company sold over 100,000 vehicles to international buyers. That is a 41.4% jump compared to the year before. While sales in China have cooled down a bit, the rest of the world can't get enough of electric BYDs. The company hopes to sell 1.3 million cars outside of China in 2026, up from 1.05 million in 2025.

To support all these new EVs, the Flash Charging network will follow the cars. BYD is opening factories in Thailand, Brazil, and Hungary. The company plans to put its fastest chargers in these regions first. By building the cars and the chargers in the same places, BYD creates a "complete ecosystem," making it much easier for someone to trade in their gas car for one of their electric models.

If BYD manages to expand its ultra-fast charging network to other markets like Europe, it will change the market completely. Having access to reliable and fast charging infrastructure is an important reason for people to buy an electric car. Price and performance have always been important factors in decision making. Tesla was the first company to understand the importance of having reliable charging on hand. BYD paid attention and is now making a 2.0 version of that approach - faster, cheaper, and made locally.

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