English edit

Noun edit

eMobility (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of emobility
    • 2012, Sarwant Singh, New Mega Trends: Implications for Our Future Lives, page 37:
      The best example to date of this new eMobility business integration model is Better Place, which was founded by Shai Agassi in Israel.
    • 2012, Weert Canzler, “eMobility in Germany: Prospects for and barriers to sustainable mobility”, in Måns Nilsson, Karl Hillman, Annika Rickne, editors, Paving the Road to Sustainable Transport, page 260:
      Seen in this context, innovation in electromobility (eMobility) takes on a special significance. eMobility is not only an alternative drive technology that can be substituted for the combustion engine that has dominated until now, it could revolutionize transport altogether because it differs decisively from conventional automobility.
    • 2016, Johannes Liebl, Grid Integration of Electric Mobility, page 159:
      The regulatory changes described above will make a number of appealing offers possible that would rapidly increase the available number of decentralized energy systems involving photovoltaics and eMobility as stable pillars of the energy transition for smart grids and smart markets and therefore ensure continued stabilization of the technical and economic system.