Greenlane Infrastructure is expanding its commercial electric truck charging network beyond California with new high-power charging sites planned in Dallas and Houston, marking the company’s entry into Texas and its next step in building a national public charging network for electric freight.
The public charging infrastructure developer and operator announced the expansion at ACT Expo 2026, positioning the Dallas-Houston I-45 corridor as a key freight route for battery-electric truck deployments. Greenlane described the corridor as one of the country’s most strategically important freight regions, connecting freight movement from the West Coast, Midwest and U.S.-Mexico border.
The new Texas sites are expected to feature six to eight pull-through lanes, tractor parking and charging infrastructure designed to support both today’s electric trucks and next-generation vehicles. Chargers will include combined charging system connectors for current-generation trucks and megawatt charging system connectors for future models, giving fleets a pathway to scale without locking into a single generation of technology.
Greenlane CEO Patrick Macdonald-King framed the expansion as “the next logical step” in building a freight charging network around how trucks actually move. The company said each site is guided by a demand-driven strategy, with Texas representing the first leg of the broader Texas triangle.
The Texas expansion also includes a fleet commitment from electric trucking carrier Nevoya, which plans multi-year operations on the corridor using Greenlane’s network. John Verdon, chief commercial officer at Nevoya, called Texas a proving ground “for any operator serious about scale,” pointing to the I-45 launch as an example of how infrastructure, carriers and market programs can align to support zero-emission freight.
Greenlane said its network is powered by the Greenlane Edge platform, which supports the Greenlane Fleet Portal and Greenlane Driver App. The tools allow fleet managers and drivers to reserve chargers in advance, monitor charging activity in real time and manage billing from a single platform.
The company also reported 99% uptime across its network and completion of an independent SOC 2 Type 2 audit, a step Greenlane positioned as part of its security and reliability standard for enterprise fleet customers.