Tunisia currently has around 570 electric cars, according to the latest figures arrested in April 2025. The information was confirmed by Abdelhamid Gannouni, director of energy efficiency in the transport sector at the National Agency for Energy Management (ANME), and manager of the electrical mobility project in Tunisia.
Invited on national radio waves, Abdelhamid Gannouni recalled that in 2024, the country still had only 250 electric vehicles. “The number has certainly more than doubled, but it is still very limited,” he said.
The ambition displayed by the authorities is to reach 125,000 electric cars and 12,000 public charging stations by 2035.
But beyond the figures, Gannouni insists on a crucial point: the origin of the electricity used. “It is essential that energy feeding these vehicles comes from renewable energies, not gas or oil, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and environmental pollution,” he said.