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Published: 18 Feb 2026

New project explores how electric vehicles could help disabled people stay connected during power outages

Category: EVs

New project explores how electric vehicles could help disabled people stay connected during power outages: 0180 alistair veryard photography mot van aug 2025 253A6884

  • Motability Operations is delivering Power Wheels, an Ofgem-funded innovation project focused on disabled and medically dependent households in the North East.
  • The project will explore how electric vehicle batteries could provide temporary backup power to help keep essential medical equipment running during power cuts.
  • Learnings from Power Wheels will help inform how similar approaches could be developed safely and implemented across the UK. 

Motability Operations – the company that runs the Motability Scheme - has been chosen as one of the delivery partners on Power Wheels, an Ofgem-funded innovation project focused on disabled and medically dependent households in the North East.  

Delivered in partnership with the Centre for Energy Equality, Northern Powergrid, Energy Systems Catapult, and Energy Innovation Centre, Power Wheels will explore how the batteries of electric vehicles (EVs) could help improve medical resilience during power outages.  

At the heart of the project is the question of how an EV could temporarily act as a backup power source for a home during a power cut - helping to keep essential medical equipment running and providing reassurance during disruption.  

The insights gained from the project will help inform wider solutions for households facing power cuts, supporting greater energy resilience across communities. 

Why energy resilience matters 

Through the Motability Scheme, Motability Operations supports thousands of disabled people - including over 12,500 EV customers in the North East - many of whom rely on electricity for essential care, mobility and independence. For these households, a power cut can be more than an inconvenience - it can disrupt vital equipment and pose serious risks to health and safety. 

As part of the project’s first phase, Motability Operations and its partners worked with disabled customers on the Motability Scheme to explore the practical features that would make EV energy services safe and reliable in the home. 

This included information-sharing about how the use of accessible two-way chargers return energy from EVs, and how they could better support disabled individuals – such as being able to charge medical equipment and mobility aids directly from an EV. The research then focussed on what would be needed to make this process as easy as possible for disabled individuals.  

Outcomes from the research included giving customers simple, accessible controls to safeguard battery charge, alongside clear information that would guide disabled drivers in understanding when their vehicle needs to be charged. 

Andrew Miller, Chief Executive of Motability Operations, said: “As the UK moves to electric vehicles, it’s vital that this transition supports disabled people’s freedom and independence, and that new technologies are designed around real lives and needs. 

“Power Wheels gives us the opportunity to work closely with customers and partners to explore how EVs could offer more than mobility - but support their medical resilience, helping people feel safer and more confident when disruption happens.” 

In the next phase of the project, Motability Operations will work directly with 30 Scheme customers to further explore how the technology would work for people with varying disabilities and requirements. Considerations from these workshops will then be used to co-create solutions for future testing.  

Motability Operations believes that the learnings from Power Wheels will help inform how similar approaches could be developed safely and responsibly across the UK, with the accessibility needs of disabled people and medically dependent households kept at the forefront. 

ENDS 

Notes to editors

Power Wheels 

Power Wheels is an innovation project focused on disabled and medically dependent households in the North East and funded through the Strategic Innovation Fund (SIF), an Ofgem programme managed in partnership with Innovate UK. 

About Motability Operations  

Motability Operations runs the Motability Scheme, which gives disabled people a lifeline, connecting them to life-changing independence and freedom.  

Through the Scheme, disabled people receiving a qualifying disability allowance can choose to exchange their allowance for a good value, accessible vehicle lease.  

We play an essential role in supporting disabled people with accessing work, healthcare, education and training, keeping them connected and improving their chances of getting a job and staying in the workforce.  

On average, Scheme users are able to work an additional two days per week, and the Scheme supports 34,000 jobs across the UK.  

We negotiate with manufacturers and partners to provide users of the Scheme with affordability and choice. On average, the Scheme is cheaper than alternative options, and includes insurance, breakdown, tyres and servicing.   

Contact information

Press Office
pressoffice@mo.co.uk

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