Electric vehicles (EVs) are revolutionizing mobility across Pakistan. Under the NEV Policy 2030, the country is targeting 30 percent EV adoption by the end of the decade. But while we focus on clean energy and futuristic transport, a digital backdoor is being left wide open. The real threat isn’t the car. It’s the EV charger silently collecting your personal data. This report explores how EV charger data collection in Pakistan may be exposing drivers, government fleets, and the entire national grid to foreign surveillance.
EV Charger Data Collection Pakistan: What’s Really Happening?
EV chargers in Pakistan are not just power ports. They are smart, connected devices. These chargers use cloud-connected systems like the Open Charge Point Protocol (OCPP) to log every detail of a charging session. Each time you charge, the system logs:
- Time and date of charge
- Charger ID and GPS location
- Vehicle ID or RFID tag
- Kilowatt-hours used
- Payment and user app details
In isolation, this might seem harmless. But when repeated across multiple sessions, the picture changes. Foreign companies managing these chargers may build detailed travel profiles of users. This opens the door to unauthorized tracking of individuals, sensitive location visits, and government fleet movements.
EV Infrastructure Cybersecurity Pakistan: The Silent Crisis
While India and the EU have enforced EV cybersecurity protocols, Pakistan’s NEV Policy 2030 includes no guidelines on data privacy or firmware security. In fact, there’s:
Country | Data Privacy Laws for EVs | Cybersecurity Audits? | Data Localization? |
---|---|---|---|
Pakistan | ❌ None | ❌ No | ❌ No |
India | ✅ CERT-In + DPDP draft law | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes (in progress) |
EU (GDPR + AFIR) | ✅ Strict data protection | ✅ Mandatory audits | ✅ Required |
USA | ✅ NHTSA & DoE guidelines | ⚠️ State-based | ❌ Varies by state |
Pakistan currently has no legal requirement for EV charger data encryption, no third-party security audits, and no policy on whether this data should remain in-country. This absence is worrying given that many local chargers are operated in partnership with foreign companies like BYD, ABB, and StarCharge.
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EV Charger Data Privacy Laws: Missing in Action
In most regions, vehicle identity and location data are protected as personal information. The European Union’s GDPR enforces user consent before collecting such data. Similarly, India’s upcoming Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) bill mandates data localization and real-time breach reporting for critical infrastructure.
In Pakistan, none of this exists. Chargers may be logging your route, your frequency of visits, and even visits to private or government facilities—all without your knowledge or consent. If this data flows to foreign-owned clouds, the risk amplifies.
Foreign Charger Deployment in Pakistan: A National Security Risk?
Several companies operate charging networks across Pakistan:
- Elite Power: Based in Lahore, Pakistan’s first EV charger deployer. Handles firmware and SCADA systems.
- Multiline: Works with Audi and Porsche. Supplies wall-mounted and telecom-integrated chargers.
- A‑Charge: Partners with ABB and StarCharge for fast-charging stations.
- BYD + HUBCO: Rolling out 128 fast chargers across highways.
- PSO: Collaborates with foreign partners to install EV chargers at major petrol stations.
Many of these vendors rely on global cloud systems like Alibaba Cloud or Huawei Cloud. If their firmware remains unregulated, any one of them could become a digital backdoor.
How This Data Can Be Exploited
Imagine someone monitoring the movement of a military convoy. Or logging the daily routes of a high-ranking official. With repeated charger logs, it’s possible to:
- Track daily commute patterns
- Identify home, office, and frequent locations
- Monitor VIP and restricted-site visits
- Predict behavior using machine learning on metadata
This data is highly valuable for both commercial surveillance and foreign intelligence.
What Global Standards Require vs. Pakistan’s Silence
EU Regulations (GDPR, AFIR, NIS2):
- Require encrypted firmware
- Enforce data minimization
- Demand user consent
- Mandate local data storage
India’s CERT-In + DPDP Bill:
- Mandates breach reporting
- Requires localization of EV data
- Includes regular audits
Pakistan’s NEV Policy:
- Has no section on cybersecurity
- Lacks data storage policy
- Does not regulate firmware updates
Real-World Exploits: Not Just Theory
In June 2025, a University of Michigan study showed that EV chargers can be compromised. Using signal injection attacks, researchers bypassed firmware authentication. They were able to alter data logs, disable chargers, and even extract location metadata in real time.
With most Pakistani EV chargers using foreign software stacks, the risk of silent data hijacking becomes very real.
Charging Ahead Without Oversight Is Risky
Pakistan is moving fast toward electrification. But speed must not come at the cost of sovereignty. Every EV charger in the country is a potential data node. Without clear policy, this turns Pakistan’s roads into a real-time surveillance system.
By treating EV chargers as critical infrastructure and adopting international security standards, Pakistan can embrace the electric future without opening itself to digital threats.
FAQs About EV Charger Data Risks
1. Can EV chargers really spy on me?
Yes. Chargers log location, time, and user ID. With enough data, analysts can map out your routine, habits, and visits to sensitive locations.
2. Is my data being stored in Pakistan?
Unlikely. Foreign vendors often use global cloud systems. Pakistan has no legal requirement for local storage of EV data.
3. Can hackers hijack charging sessions?
Yes. Studies show chargers can be compromised using signal injection or malware, especially those with outdated firmware.
4. What do other countries do to prevent this?
The EU and India enforce strict cybersecurity, data privacy, and storage laws. EVs and chargers are treated as critical infrastructure.
5. What can Pakistan do right now?
Enforce data localization, require firmware audits, mandate encryption protocols, and update NEV 2030 with cybersecurity clauses.