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Pioneering the Future: The First Combined Heat Pump and EV Charger

saffron by saffron
June 18, 2025
in News
2
Pioneering the Future: The First Combined Heat Pump and EV Charger

A ground breaking partnership between Mitsubishi Electric and Irish tech innovator EVHACS has delivered a revolutionary combined unit.

One of the most exciting new developments in sustainable tech is the arrival of a single unit that combines a heat pump and an electric vehicle (EV) charger — a first-of-its-kind product designed to simplify how homes manage power, comfort, and clean transport.

Launched in Ireland, this breakthrough marks a major step toward integrated, intelligent home energy systems.

What Is It?

This new device is a multi-functional energy solution that merges:

  • An air-source heat pump (for heating and cooling)
  • An EV charging station
  • A smart control system that manages energy use

In essence, it brings home heating and EV charging together in one compact unit, powered through a shared electrical connection. Instead of installing two separate systems — with all the complexity and cost that involves — households can now benefit from a streamlined, space-saving solution.

Why It Matters

One System, One Installation

  • By combining technologies, homeowners and developers save money on equipment, labour, and ongoing maintenance.

Smarter Use of Energy

  • The unit is built with intelligent load balancing, meaning it can optimise when to heat your home and when to charge your car, depending on demand and available electricity.

Perfect for Modern Homes

  • Whether you’re building new or retrofitting an existing property, space is always at a premium. This all-in-one design reduces wall clutter and helps simplify planning.

EV Charging Meets Low-Carbon Heating

Home energy use and transport are two of the biggest carbon contributors. This system helps cut both:

  • Heat pumps are already a more sustainable replacement for gas boilers, using outside air to heat or cool homes efficiently.
  • EV chargers support the switch away from fossil-fuel-powered vehicles.

Bringing these technologies together helps create a cleaner, future-ready home — and makes it easier for more people to take that step.

Who Should Care?

This technology is ideal for:

  • Eco-conscious homeowners looking to decarbonise their home and car at the same time.
  • Property developers aiming to meet new building standards with fewer components.
  • Businesses and social landlords investing in efficient, low-maintenance energy upgrades.

A Vision of the Future

This combined heat pump and EV charger unit represents more than just convenience — it’s a symbol of where the energy sector is heading. As homes become smarter, cleaner, and more self-sufficient, integrated systems like this will play a key role in reducing emissions and managing power sustainably.

It’s not just about saving money or space — it’s about building homes that are ready for the next decade.


The release of the world’s first dual-purpose heating and EV charging unit is a clear sign that energy innovation is accelerating. With real-world benefits in efficiency, cost, and carbon reduction, it sets the tone for the next generation of home energy systems — and makes sustainable living more accessible than ever.

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Comments 2

  1. Mohamed says:
    6 months ago

    Ok
    So, what would the Network draw be if every house, in a 130 modern housing development, had this unit.
    On a cold evening, everyone clicks up the heating a couple of degrees, and has His and Her cars on charge for morning commute. Add general House usage, drying kids clothes for school, cooking the evening meal and electric dishwasher.
    What would each house, and in turn the development take off the network in that evening?

    Reply
    • saffron says:
      6 months ago

      Great question — and you’ve touched on a key challenge for future-ready homes.

      If every house in a 130-home development had this system, overall demand would certainly rise — especially during cold evenings when heating, EV charging, and regular household use all happen together.

      The good news is, these units include intelligent load management. That means:

      ✅ EV charging can be timed or adjusted to avoid peak grid strain.
      ✅ Heating can be staggered or optimised around off-peak hours.
      ✅ The system works smarter to balance comfort, transport, and energy use.

      Of course, the exact network draw depends on factors like house size, battery capacity, and usage patterns. But integrating systems like this — rather than running everything separately — helps reduce pressure on the grid, not add to it.

      Appreciate you raising the point — these conversations are vital as we move toward smarter, low-carbon living.

      Reply

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