DUBAI, UAE -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 9 April 2026 - There was a point in time when electric vehicles
weren't just a relative novelty, but were actually a preferred choice,
at least in the U.S., where they first gained traction. Even back in the
1990s, people were already aware of the benefits of EVs, being quieter,
easier to operate, and well-suited for city trips.
Then they vanished. Crude oil discoveries made fuel cheap. Gas stations
multiplied across highways and rural roads. Electricity, meanwhile,
barely reached beyond urban centers. Without places to charge, EVs
became impractical curiosities, and the internal combustion engine took
over for the next hundred years.
The lesson is clear: EVs didn't lose because they were inferior, but
because of the lack of a supporting ecosystem. Some brands today are
determined not to make the same mistake that doomed early EVs.
In Vietnam, currently among the world's fastest-growing EV markets, if
you go back a few years, you might not have seen any EVs at all. Ask
around, and you would have found that the biggest concern then was range
anxiety and charging access. Charging at home was the only real option,
but this was mostly limited to affluent households, not those living in
older apartment buildings or homes tucked deep inside alleyways.
Fast forward to last Saturday, and the picture looks very different.
VinFast, the country's first and only domestic EV manufacturer, set a
new record with more than 3,520 orders completed in a single day. This
figure is equivalent to the monthly sales of some internal combustion
engine automakers in the country and translates to an average of 146
orders per hour, or approximately 2.4 orders per minute.
The product hadn't changed dramatically. What changed was how usable it
became in everyday conditions. VinFast customers can now access charging
stations every 3.5 kilometers within cities, a density that exceeds
many urban charging targets globally. On highways, stations appear every
65 kilometers, tighter than the U.S. federal guideline of one every 80
kilometers. Its app routes trips around charging stops in much the same
way navigation apps route around traffic.
The company is also developing its own infrastructure for its customers
in every market where it operates, including in the Middle East. In
February, VinFast signed an agreement with PlusX Electric, a
UAE-certified charging and mobility provider, to build out a comparable
support layer for its Gulf customers. The deal covers portable charging
pods for on-the-go use, mobile emergency charging for drivers caught
short, and roadside assistance.
"VinFast is committed to building a long-term and comprehensive EV
ecosystem in the UAE, one that gives customers confidence not only in
the quality and performance of our electric vehicles, but also in the
reliability and accessibility of the supporting infrastructure," a
VinFast Middle East executive said in a press release.
VinFast's effort aligns with broader green initiatives across several
Gulf countries. Saudi Arabia has been rolling out fast chargers along
major corridors. The UAE has made EV infrastructure mandatory in new
developments. The sequence mirrors what Vietnam has already gone
through, but at a faster pace. The Middle East is now laying the
groundwork to skip the slower early phase, and VinFast, having already
moved through both stages of that transition, seems to know exactly what
that groundwork needs to look like.