Published On: February 17th, 20251 min read

Electric vehicle (EV) ownership in the U.S. is set to grow tenfold by 2030, and the country is gearing up to meet demand. Today, 48,000 public charging stations serve EV owners across the U.S, and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act will add 450,000 more in the next five years. While this rapid expansion is great for EV adoption, it also opens the door to major cybersecurity risks that could disrupt charging networks, compromise data, and even threaten the power grid.

DMI’s EV Charging Infrastructure Zero Trust Assessment (ZTA) helps agencies uncover vulnerabilities, keep charging stations running, and protect the people who rely on them. Through penetration testing, we uncover threats like malware, supply chain attacks, and man-in-the-middle exploits, demonstrating tactics such as SQL injections and denial-of-service attacks. Combined with alerts-based threat intelligence and dark web monitoring, DMI’s ZTA assessment identifies risks and equips your agency to proactively tackle them.