Firefighters wearing breathing apparatus extinguished a car fire on Otley Road in Harrogate this afternoon.
The blaze, which occurred at 3.27pm today, March 20, is believed to have occurred to an electric car outside Horticap garden centre.
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service’s incident report said a crew from Harrogate used one hose reel jet to bring the fire under control.
An eyewitness told the Stray Ferret that emergency service workers closed Otley Road for a while and a diversion was put in place via Harrogate Police Station.
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue said in a statement:
“Crews from Harrogate attended an incident involving a small vehicle fire. Crews extinguished the fire and the scene was made safe.”
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Firefighters were called to help the driver of an electric vehicle that crashed near Knaresborough yesterday.
The single vehicle collision occurred on the B6164 at Little Ribston at about 5.30pm yesterday, according to North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service’s incident report.
Fire crews from Harrogate and Wetherby responded to the incident.
The report said:
“Crews released the male from the vehicle who was mechanically trapped.
“He was then transported to hospital via road ambulance. Crews then made the vehicle safe.”
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- Barn destroyed after bonfire spreads at Blubberhouses
- Firefighters respond to hot tub blaze near Knaresborough
Fully Charged LIVE, making its debut up North at the Yorkshire Event Centre in Harrogate

This story is sponsored by Fully Charged Live
The world’s number 1 home energy & electric vehicle show, Fully Charged LIVE, will be making its debut up North at the Yorkshire Event Centre in Harrogate over the weekend of the 19th – 21st May 2023 following the success of events around the world in Farnborough, Sydney, Vancouver, San Diego and Netherlands.
Fully Charged LIVE North in Harrogate is expected to bring in 10,000 visitors over the weekend of the 19th – 21st May. After the success we have received at the South event over the past few years, coming to the North was a natural progression.
We want to spread our message: #STOPBURNINGSTUFF and make more people aware of the greener choices that we can all be making and help others gain a better understanding of how they can help to make an impact against climate change and save our planet.

This Festival of Electrification will showcase a host of quality exhibits and attractions including:
- Over 30 speaker sessions held over two theatres, featuring presenters from the Fully Charged Show, expert panellists and special guests. These live sessions will look at topics such as “Are Electric Car Conversions the next big business?”, “Energy & EV mythbusting!”, and the favourite Electric Fireside Chat hosted by Robert Llewellyn, where he has a chat with some big names in the clean energy industry, and a few familiar faces.
- 120+ exhibitors and offering clean energy solutions and electric vehicles of all shapes and sizes
- Test Drives – Companies such as Polestar, Hyundai, BYD, Genesis and others will be providing their top models for you to get behind the wheel of, as well as electric motorcycles supplied by A E Bikes, ABB and Fonz that will be available for you to try too.
- The Electric Launchpad will showcase cars that have yet to be seen in the public, giving you the first look at the future of electric vehicles.
- A M1CRO-MACH1NES area, were visitors will be able to test out the range of electric two-wheelers we have to offer, including e-bikes, e-scooters and e-skateboards. This variety of two-wheelers offer an exciting and innovative form of travel for city living and commuting, or just for your own leisure.
- The Home Energy Advice Team, powered by OVO, will be able to answer your burning questions about the current energy crisis, sustainable ways to provide that energy to your home and ways to save on your energy bills.
- Kids Zone – With free entry for little ones, parents will be able to bring the little ones in the family for a fun packed day of activities for them. From a sustainable lego city to learning circus skills, we think you’ll agree that it will be an educating, entertaining and a great value family day out.
Fully Charged LIVE, will be making its debut up North at the Yorkshire Event Centre in Harrogate over the weekend of the 19th – 21st May 2023.
Click or tap here to get your tickets for Fully Charged Live now.
Harrogate district to get 20 new electric vehicle chargepointsNorth Yorkshire is set to receive 140 new chargepoints for electric vehicles under a scheme announced today by the Department for Transport.
The county’s seven districts, including Harrogate, will each get 20 chargers.
The chargepoints will installed at on-street locations and at larger petrol-station charging hubs.
It is hoped the move will give drivers without home chargers more confidence to switch to electric, and reduce ‘range anxiety’ among existing electric vehicle users by helping to ensure motorists are never far from a chargepoint.
North Yorkshire County Council was awarded the funding today.
The council previously suggested that Markington, Pateley Bridge and Conyngham Hall in Knaresborough could receive new chargepoints in the Harrogate district. But it has yet to confirm the locations after today’s news.
Councillor Greg White, the council’s executive member for climate change, welcomed the funding. He said:
“The switch to electric vehicles is necessary as North Yorkshire moves towards becoming carbon zero, but the rural nature of the county presents some significant challenges.
“We worked hard to come up with an innovate scheme which will begin to provide the answers motorists need if they are to have the confidence to go electric.”
The chargers are part of the new Local EV Infrastructure (LEVI) pilot scheme where the council and industry work in partnership.
Companies are putting £200,000 towards the scheme.

The council will install more electric chargers (photo: Andrew Roberts/Unsplash)
Harrogate currently has six public charging points – though the type and number of charging points varies between each station.
Knaresborough currently has two charging points whilst Ripon has four.
National plans
North Yorkshire is one of the first nine areas to receive funding.
A total of £20 million has been allocated for the pilot scheme nationally.
The government plans to eventually invest £450 million into the scheme nationwide.
It intends to grow the network of charging points around the country with more than 1,000 new charging stations set to be installed.
Decarbonisation minister Trudy Harrison said:
Green Shoots: What it’s like to own an electric car in Harrogate“We want to expand and grow our world-leading network of EV chargepoints, working closely with industry and local government, making it even easier for those without driveways to charge their electric vehicles and support the switch to cleaner travel.”
Harrogate residents Ralph Armsby and his partner Judy Carrivick ditched their petrol car for an electric Kia e-Niro earlier this year.
They got the car on a four-year lease and pay around £450 a month plus £460 a year in insurance.
Because it’s a low emission vehicle they pay zero car tax, and when they charge it at home it ends up costing just over 1p a mile to drive.
Mr Armsby said switching to an EV was “a no-brainer” due to the environmental cost of driving a petrol car.
“We’re very aware of air pollution, not just from the car but it starts when they take the oil out of ground, to tankers driving around the UK.
“You should get something that is powered down a wire rather than being pumped out at stations all over the place.”
Mr Amsby said it’s important to check with Northern Powergrid that your home is able to install a charging point because there was a lack of fast public charging points in Harrogate.
It cost the couple around £600 to install one, which they plug into the car overnight whilst they sleep so they can wake up with a full charge.
If they decide to charge the car throughout the day, it works out at around 3p a mile.
Range anxiety
Mr Armsby said he sometimes suffers from “range anxiety”, the phenomenon where EV drivers are worried their car will run out of charge before they find somewhere to power it up. But on a full charge, their car can manage over 280 miles, depending on driving style.
They use an app called ZapMap to find public charging points. During a recent trip to Wales, they found towns much smaller than Harrogate were better equipped for EV drivers with more places to charge.
Harrogate has several public charging points, with 7kw, 24kw and 50kw connections.
The only fast 50kw charging points are at Harrogate Borough Council’s civic centre at Knapping Mount, where it costs more to charge than at home. There are also three fast charging points outside Lidl in Knaresborough.
If you charge your car at the civic centre it takes around half an hour to get a full charge.
Read more:
- Green Shoots: Why Harrogate should be at the vanguard of tackling climate change
- Harrogate’s addiction to SUVs contributing to climate crisis
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Mr Armsby said the council charging points were welcome, but Harrogate needed more and was poorly equipped for business travellers who might be using the convention centre.
He said:
“If you come here on a conference, you’ll be fighting for a space there.
“We desperately need more fast charging points.”
There are other slower charging 7kw charging points around the district, which are able to give an EV a short boost.
There are even now charging points at the almost 1,000-year-old Fountains Abbey. Mr Armsby said he has visited twice because he could charge his car outside the ruin.
In total, the Harrogate district has 53 EV charging points in 30 different locations, but some can only be used by Teslas.

Mr Armsby plugging in
Mr Armbsy said many more on-street charging facilities were needed in Harrogate so people can plug in whilst they shop.
He added:
“Other countries have had on-street charging and had it for years, we’re not world beating in the UK, we’re miles behind European countries.”
Joy to drive
The couple are retired and use their car mainly for leisure and shopping.
Mr Armsby said:
“It’s a joy to drive, we’re fighting each other on who’s going to drive!”
Whilst electric vehicles still produce emissions through their tyres — and there are concerns over the mining of minerals to make the batteries — Mr Armbsy said he would never go back to driving a petrol car.
He said:
“Harrogate is quite polluted. Cold Bath Road, for example, is a rat run in the mornings with kids being dropped off in Range Rovers. It would be so much nicer on these roads if everyone was driving electric.”
Do you have an interesting project or passion that improves the environment and could feature in Green Shoots? Contact thomas@thestrayferret.co.uk