Elektros Inc. Drives Expansion Efforts with Ultra-Fast Electric Vehicle Charging Breakthrough

Elektros Inc. Drives Expansion Efforts with Ultra-Fast Electric Vehicle Charging Breakthrough

2026-04-02 companies

Miami, Thursday, 2 April 2026.
Elektros Inc. highlights a critical investment window driven by patented technology that claims to slash electric vehicle charging times from one hour to just five to seven minutes.

A Structural Shift in Electric Mobility

On March 30, 2026, Elektros Inc. (OTC PINK:ELEK) publicly introduced its patented multiplug charging system, holding U.S. Patent No. 12,522,100 B1 [4]. The technology is engineered to compress standard electric vehicle charging times, which traditionally take between 45 and 60 minutes, down to a mere 5 to 7 minutes [1][4]. This represents a potential maximum time reduction of 91.667 percent for drivers waiting at charging stations. Elektros CEO Shlomo Bleier described this development not merely as an incremental upgrade, but as a structural shift in how time is valued within the electric vehicle economy [1].

Vertical Integration and the Lithium Supply Chain

Beyond charging infrastructure, Elektros is aggressively pursuing a vertical integration strategy to secure its position in the broader energy transition sector [2][3]. On March 31, 2026, New York-based equity research firm Ludlow Research published a comprehensive report detailing the company’s dual-focus approach [2]. A core component of this strategy involves the development of artisanal hard-rock lithium mining operations located in Sierra Leone, West Africa [2][3].

Macroeconomic Tailwinds Accelerating Adoption

The company’s expansion efforts are unfolding against a backdrop of complex macroeconomic pressures that could accelerate the adoption of energy-efficient infrastructure [2]. Geopolitical instability in the Strait of Hormuz has recently driven oil prices close to $100 per barrel [2][3]. This region is a critical global chokepoint for maritime transit, and disruptions there historically lead to significant volatility in worldwide fossil fuel markets [GPT].

Sources


Electric infrastructure Institutional investment