Hi, everyone. Welcome to ADS-TEC Energy's full year 2022 earnings call. A recording of today's call and a presentation can be accessed shortly after it concludes from the investors section of our website. Joining me on today's call are Thomas Speidel, Founder and CEO of ADS-TEC Energy, and Wolfgang Breme, CFO of ADS-TEC Energy. Today, we will be discussing ADS-TEC's latest financial results for the full year 2022, guidance for 2023, and conclude with a Q&A session. Please note, to ask a question, you will need to dial in with the telephone details provided. During the call, management will be making forward-looking statements regarding full year 2023 and onwards, and the outlook for expected growth and investment initiatives.
These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control and could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations, including among other risks and uncertainties, supply chain issues, the war in Ukraine, and geopolitical challenges. These forward-looking statements apply as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update these statements after the call. For a more detailed description of factors that could cause actual results to differ, please refer to the Risk Factors section of our annual report on Form 20-F, previously filed with the SEC and posted to the investors section of our website. Please note that financial measures presented on this call adhere to IFRS and non-IFRS. We use non-IFRS measures because we believe they provide useful information about our operating performance that should be considered by investors in conjunction with the IFRS measures that we provide.
A reconciliation of these non-IFRS measures to comparable IFRS measures is included in the earnings release and investor presentation. If you require operator assistance, please press Star than zero. With that, I will turn the call over to Thomas Speidel, ADS-TEC's founder and CEO. Thomas.
Yes. Thank you very much. Very warm welcome from my side and from Wolfgang to this call. I'm happy that you take your time and go with us through this earning call. Let me start with some information about our product portfolio and where we are. As I guess most of you know, the ChargeBox is the product which is already out there in the field and which is our battery buffered supercharger, being well-received and up and operating. We have now, and you will see that later, not only our initial customer from the automotive business, now we have more customers, and I want to show you later in the presentation where the ChargeBox meanwhile is operating and serving not only in the EV business, but also in related businesses of mobility, such now the first time also for electric boating.
The second product segment, also battery buffered charging. We have announced it. We are proud that we made it on time last year due to all the difficulties in supply chain and shortages. It's the ChargePost. The ChargePost, similar technology, so we can connect to the existing low power grid. In this case, it is a all-in-one solution, so no separate dispenser. We added up to two big advertisement screens, which allows us to offer our customers more revenue streams. This is very important to understand the ADS-TEC business model. We are not a component supplier. We are providing platforms, including hardware, software, and services over long-term periods that allows our customers and partners to operate their business to the end customer. ChargePost has been launched as expected, 2022, and we also will see later a little bit more information about the ChargePost.
It's very well-received. We have presented it the first time on the new exhibition in Stuttgart here, Volta-X. Mainly from infrastructure investors and operators, we get a very solid feedback. The reason is, it's easy to install, it's providing many different revenue streams, and as I said, in this case, the advertisement comes on top of it. The PowerBooster. So these two segments, PowerBooster and storage rack systems, that's our commercial industrial business, which we are doing since many, many years. Here we have updated and expanded our portfolio. So new batteries as we have announced it, so new cells and modules came in. This year, 2023, we are starting to deploy the new and expanded systems to the market. Next page, please. Don't see it.
It's not.
What we see here, and that is important to understand and to know, why is it important that when I speak about we are not only a component or hardware company, it's a platform business, eco-platform business. We see that here, the circles, we start with the hardware. That's important because if we don't understand the hardware, and if we don't have the ability to act on any level of the hardware, we cannot provide long-term services. This is what, in current discussions with customers, and if I may say, I am in that business now for 12 years, and at the beginning, people were starting with demonstration units. We had first projects or with very early state customers. Now that is changing.
We are talking more and more to infrastructure investors, which are interested in investing in a larger portfolio. That portfolio must be managed. As you know, if you listen to our general business model, we want to be the partner for these operators to run the business not only for years but for decades, so very long time periods. That requests that we can act in hardware, software, and it ends up in services we are providing. We see in these circles here on the slide, we start in the center with the hardware, and then we add the software and the operating system, the security stacks, and the services. We even provide basic apps, and we compare that.
On the right side, you see a mobile phone, just to give an analogy how that works. If you have your smartphone, you also get a platform, including sensors and actors. You get an operating system, including the security, the backend connection, the ability to store data in the backend and to analyze it. Also apps are provided on the device. The same is in our business, we are not only providing the platform, we are providing basic apps. What are basic apps? Basic apps are, for example, charging, billing, calibrated DC metering, connection to backends, to SCADA systems, from our customers and partners, they can operate our platforms out in the field, that's the way how they can scale.
Important will be, and we will see that later, now after the initial installations have been done, we see that the services are getting more and more important. We have told that when we made the PIPE presentations before our de-SPAC, and we mentioned that the service will come after the initial installation and setting into operation phase. The reason is availability and maintaining the platform and offering services to adapt the platform to all of the changes we see in the, let's say, all-electric world out there. That's key to operate your business and to make revenue out of the investment. That is important to understand, and that applies for all of our platforms, whether it's the battery buffer charging, whether it's the battery system, including the controls on that side.
This is also the reason, many people are asking us, "Why are you not offering non-battery buffer chargers?" Yeah. There is a market for non-battery buffer chargers. It is just converting AC to DC on a high-power scale. The reason is that we believe we need to have the multi-revenue streams, so not only one business model, transferring AC to DC. We want to offer our partners and customers revenue streams coming out of grid services, peak shaving, whatever else might be in the future available for grid or flexibility services, in addition, for sure, charging. With the battery, we can also offer to use the local generated electricity, which makes it in total cheaper, more convenient, better for the end customer. Next page, please.
I don't know whether we see now. It takes a little bit, a few seconds. Now we see the next. Before we go into the financial details, just let me talk about some operational highlights. We communicated last year, and I will pick up on that, one slide later, about the issue in the supply chain. I think that has been a common problem. We got hit by some major components. We have not been able to, for example, assemble some PCBs. If you don't have a PCB, then the complete inverter or whatever it is, cannot be made. We started then a task force, which did a very good job.
Finally, by end of the year, many of these issues had been solved. We see later how that turned out in terms of how many products we have been able to produce and how we overcome the supply chain issue and where we are today. The second thing, which was very important for us in 2022, I mentioned it already, for us it was very important that we do not delay or postpone the launch of the ChargePost. We have announced the ChargePost for 2022 for Europe. We delivered the ChargePost and the launch in 2022. We have also shipped the first systems in 2022 to our initial customers.
You see here on the picture, a real example, which is in front of our office, where we also get an impression about the advertisement screens and the opportunities arising out of that additional business. As I mentioned, the ChargePost will, besides the ChargeBox, have a very significant part in our portfolio and also for the future business and revenue stream. The reason is, and we will come to that later, we see more and more demand for supercharging and not only on the Autobahn or on these charge parks, but more and more in the city, close to the office buildings or industrial sites. We will see that later in the presentation. Strategically, we are focusing on blue-chip partners and strategic customers. The business model of ADS-TEC is not to operate the units by ourself.
The business model is not that we are selling electricity to the end customer or managing the local regulation. Our business is providing the platform, the services, and to enable these partners so that they can scale their business. Saying that, it ends up in a, in the focus on these strategic partners having not only five or ten sites, so they rather have many, so we can scale with our customers. The customers are using the benefits and the opportunities of these which are provided by these platforms and integrate it in their own software. That is the reason, and we need to understand that it takes time to integrate the units into the business and into the software and into the business model of our partners and customers.
We call them internally the future power companies because we are thinking about the segments, for example, classic established utilities, but also oil and gas companies, and ending up with new codes coming out of the digital energy management segment, which know how to, for example, use flexibility in terms of buffers, and combine that with photovoltaic or grid services, and then operate and manage these units in a larger scale. These are our customers, and our focus is going more and more to these bigger and strategic partners, and that is what we did in 2022. As I mentioned, to get into such a customer, that is nothing. The sales cycle is not just yet that you present the unit and they do one or two tests.
It's something, I always say it's like a pregnancy, which takes nine months, and if you try to shorten it, then it might not end good. The same is here. When we go to a new strategic partner or customer, it takes time. It's not a product that you sell just off the shelf. On the other side, if we are in the business together with our customer, then both sides have a long-term relationship, which is important for both parties in the business. We have a business over long term providing the technology, the services, and the add-ons and the data, access to the data. Our customer, they have a partner where they can rely on over long-term periods, so their investment is not stranded. They can use it even if the conditions and the parameters might change. Next page, please.
Please let me start before I hand over to Wolfgang, our CFO. Where do we come from? What has been the last communication and where we are now, respectively end of 2022. The press release or the statement in September 2022 had been that our revenue projection will be above EUR 80 million for 2023. That was based on a solid order book and on a secured production capacity in our factory. Out of a sudden, we had the problem with the supply issues. We communicated that immediately in October as soon as it came up. We said that we have to cut the projection because we needed to get the material or the components and to get that solved.
What has happened between October and end of the year? As I mentioned, our team has successfully managed the major supply issues, and that has been material hunting. Where can we get the missing parts, which ends up in brokerage and other things. That is a big Advantage of ADS-TEC due to our ability to act and to make all changes even down on the PCB level. We did, and that was a big challenge for our technical people.
We have been able to replace components. Here I think that's a big point also for our customers, that just in case if we, you know, hit or come into situations like that, material shortage could be because of a situation like now, which is, as we know, from COVID or the war in the Ukraine or whatever might be, part of the reason. In many cases over time, just components are phasing out. Here we see that it is important and that it is a benefit if companies can then act and change even on the low-level PCB site, and that's what we did. In the remaining months, from October to end of the year, we produced systems and performed services from the factory.
The factory is in Germany. In the US, where we have started our site in Auburn, that has started with services and warehousing. We have produced here a number which is now, it's not on the corporate level, but it's on the GmbH level of EUR 45.6 million. We shipped the finished goods to the US before year-end, what has been our target. If you calculate the ships and the time to ship it to the US, then you get an impression how much pressure we had and what we finally have received in this difficult situation.
Unfortunately, clients have not been able to take the products by 12 by end of the year, and that is then the reason and what we will see also in our financials. We have shipped them, and the finished goods are by end of the year in our warehouse and in the U.S., in the facility, and will now be moved in 2023. With that, please next page. I am pleased to hand over to Wolfgang, and he will go now into the details and the financials, where we will see what that means because Wolfgang. Here we are. You get going.
Yeah. Thanks, Thomas, good day to everybody. After covering our full year result 2022, including revenue, operational expenses, EBITDA and cash, I will provide guidance for this fiscal year, full year 2023 in respect to revenue, order book and profitability. As Thomas already pointed out, we successfully managed the supply chain crisis in the second half of 2022. We were able to produce systems and perform services of EUR 45.6 million out of our factory locations in Europe. This said, we were impacted by certain clients not taking products by December 31st. This means that our full year revenue was -EUR 26.4 million, down EUR 6.6 million from fiscal year 2021 revenue of EUR 33 million.
The decrease in revenue from contracts with customers for last fiscal year in comparison is mainly driven by lower than expected sales in the United States and also, of course, the supply chain pressures we faced during the course of last fiscal year. From a product perspective, the majority of our sales, like in previous years, was generated by our charging products. ChargeBox and ChargePost also included already, as Thomas pointed out. We sold ChargePost and revenue ChargePost last year, which accounted in total the charging products for 74% of total revenue. Commercial and industrial product service and others were 26% of our total revenues. From a geographic perspective, 2022 revenue was 74% from Germany and 26% from other European countries and the United States of America.
Turning to gross profit and loss, our full year 2022 came in at - EUR 4.5 million, down from - EUR 2.3 million in full year fiscal year 2021. The reduced gross profit mainly resulted from higher than expected supply chain costs and lower output. As you remember, because of material shortages at some of our suppliers, we had to revert to brokers to complete our customer orders. Since then, we have redesigned our supply chain, and we are comfortable that we will return to gross margins as we have seen in the past. Secondly, the build-out of our manufacturing facilities, both in Europe and in the United States, led to an increase of payroll-related costs in the cost of goods sold.
Coming to operational expenses, we saw a significant increase in sales, general and administrative expenses in fiscal year 22 in comparison to 21. SG&A expenses accounted for EUR 31.3 million in 2022 compared to EUR 13.3 million in full year 2021. Legal and consulting stayed on a higher level because of the merger with EUSG and being a publicly listed company now. Please don't forget, It's the first year, 2022, for us being a listed company, the first full year. Personal expenses were increased because of the build-up of our production facilities in Germany, our US presence in Auburn, Alabama, and general growth of the business. The first-time recognition of stock option expenses accounted for EUR 2.8 million, and insurance expenses, including the necessary D&O insurances as a public company, were EUR 2.3 million.
Our operating result came in at minus EUR 36.4 million compared to minus EUR 18.6 million in full year 2021. Adding back depreciation and amortization of EUR 4.3 million result in an EBITDA of EUR 32.1 million for fiscal year 2022. The finance income of positive EUR 20.5 million was largely driven by income from the remeasurement of warrant liabilities and foreign currency gains because of the stronger US dollar compared to the euro during last fiscal year. Our result for the period net income is minus EUR 18.9 million for full year 2022. Quickly turning to the balance sheet, inventories rose to EUR 40.1 million, driven by that the reasons mentioned before and higher than expected business volume in the coming quarters.
Trade and other receivables increased to EUR 17.7 million, mainly driven by higher trade receivables. Trade and other payables went up on the credit side of the balance sheet because of growing deposits from our customers. Our cash balance is EUR 34.4 million down from EUR 101.8 million at the end of 2021. This was driven by higher working capital and operating losses, as commented on already. Next slide, please. Let me come to the outlook for fiscal year 2023. For this year, we expect revenues to exceed EUR 100 million.
This target is underpinned by a strong order book of EUR 90 million in binding orders from quality customers and, of course, by the substantial growth we currently see in the market, driven by strong customer dynamics and the general development towards electro mobility and CO2 reduction initiatives all over the world, especially in the countries we are focusing on, which is Europe, European Union, UK, and the United States of America and Canada. On those revenue levels exceeding EUR 100 million, as I said, we will be the highest revenues in the company's history. We are expecting also a break-even to positive EBITDA. Before I end, let me report on a very important event and achievement after December 31st, which we also published today as a Form 6-K on the SEC website, which you can access through our website.
On May 5th, ADS-TEC Energy entered into an unsecured shareholder loan with multiple shareholders amounting to a total of $12.9 million USD, thereof $7.1 million maturing on June 30th and $5.6 million of 2024 and $5.8 million due on December 22nd, 2023. The shareholder loans can be drawn down by ADS-TEC Energy as required. This strengthens our balance sheet and is a strong signal and commitment by our shareholders. Needless to say, we are not intending to raise equity in the next foreseeable future. A quick look at 2024 and beyond before I give back to Thomas. We anticipate substantial growth driven by very strong customer dynamics and market trend for 2024. A very positive outlook here. With that, I turn back to you, Thomas.
Thank you, Wolfgang. I think we can see here on that slide that the strong order backlog of EUR 90 million and what we expect in revenues is very close. We, we want to be on a side where we really see that that's gonna happen due to all these or based on all these things we cannot calculate like we saw it last year. Let me go into the details and why we are so positive in terms of what's coming and what's next. One thing it was just announced a few days ago, we are working with our partner, JOLT, since many years, having the same vision. JOLT is one of these future power companies using our products and running their business case on the platforms.
I don't know whether you have seen it, but it was published in many main medias that they, JOLT has now get a lot of funding. They have received EUR 150 million now, and they have a pretty significant and big growth plan over the next years. We received directly a new order, significant double-digit number of ChargePosts. We start with JOLT, the growth now in Europe and also in other countries. If you want more details about that, then please go also to the JOLT website to the press releases. We see here Maurice, the CEO, and myself on a site in Stuttgart, where I will later give some more details also about the utilization and the performance.
That gives us an impression why the technology and the battery buffered supercharger makes a lot of sense, especially in these kind of areas, downtown and close to factory facilities, office buildings, and even in the countryside. Another thing which is important for us, and I mentioned it at the beginning, is service. We see not only with JOLT, but also with other infrastructure investors where we are either in negotiation or have already contracts that service will play a very big role. We expect more and more service contracts to be signed on long-term service agreements because it is necessary and it is key that the units are available.
We see that in the complete EV business, that people are only accepting chargers being always on and providing the electricity or the charging capacity being requested by the car. In the service business, we have three models, which can be negotiated in detail then about what data shall be offered, what access to our cloud is required. Are you asking just for a second-level support or a third-level support? Here we can a little bit tailor-made, adapt our services and offerings to our customers' and partners' need, which allows them to integrate not only the hardware with the interfaces, but also the business model and the services in their own business model.
That is slightly different from partner to partner because they are running already infrastructure, software packages, backend systems, or trading trading accounts for electricity. It's important to bring these together, and we see here more and more coming business over the next year, not only with new customers, but also with existing ones where we expect that they are jumping on the bus to also get the services for a long-term period. Next page, please. Expanding the business is one of the key things, and let me just say something about that. The infrastructure business, how we call it, is getting more and more important.
Infrastructure means, first of all, of course, yeah, charge parks, which are directly connected to the grid in almost all of the today's installations. That's not our business. We see that from these major suppliers, charge parks along the highways and Autobahns. We are focusing on the decentral side, and there you need infrastructure partners because this is in park houses. This is, as I said, close to the buildings, to the real estate, and it is always linked and combined with infrastructure, not only related to the site, but also to the regulations. You may have to apply for it. You may have different local regulations. It can depend from the grid provider or from the electricity company.
All of that has to be taken care, and that is exactly what our partners are doing. We have explored the market and one segment, which is important for us, that is the rental cars and the fleet business. I'm proud to announce today that we have one first really relevant and leading rental car company, which has now taken the first units for their sites. We know and have read it in the news that also the rental car companies now will go more and more into the EV and in the electric-powered offerings to the end customer. Therefore, we can imagine how many charging opportunities we need.
Just when we go on vacation and we pick up the car, then we need a supercharging opportunity because nobody wants to wait for hours just to go to the hotel or wherever the place might be. The second thing, which is important for us, I said we are concentrating on blue chips and strategic customers. We have been able to sign a framework agreement with a blue-chip-listed oil and gas company. We call them also the future power company, as I said at the beginning, because all of these companies are in the transformation, not only from the CO2 reduction, but also from what is coming up in the all-electric world.
For us, it's important to be also in this space, it took us many months to get that contract done, and we are proud that this is another partner where we expect the first deals now kicking in in 2023 as well. Next page, please. To understand why this business is really strong and it's getting stronger, I want to share with you the proof that has been made. Here we see three sites in Hamburg, Stuttgart, and Frankfurt, where the ChargeBoxes are installed with our partner. Here in the example it's JOLT. We see that the utilization rates are really going in a high level. A lot of people have not expected that battery buffer chargers are able to provide such a high utilization.
Normally, in all of the discussion, people mention, "Hey, there is a battery inside the charger." Okay, we have understood that we can charge the internal battery. When the car shows up, the battery will drain, but it takes time to recharge the internal battery, so the utilization must be low. Here, there is one thing which is important. If we just take the number, the expected number of EVs in 2030, which is the plan for the U.S., United States, as well as for the European Union, then we talk about 330 million of pure EVs in 2030.
That's the way to go, but if we just take that number and we say, the amount of electricity which is needed to operate and run these 30 million cars, and now let's take a bigger one, assume it's a Tesla, more or less, or something like that, then that ends up in a demand for electricity, which is about 90 TWh a year. That is not really a lot, huh, if we talk about electricity. One rumor, which is not true, is that we don't have the electricity. The problem is do we have it everywhere, anywhere, and do we have it in the necessary power quality on the rates so that we can charge within a reasonable time?
If we take these 90 terawatt-hours and cut them down, we know that one-third will be charged at home. Let's say low power destination at offices is the next one-third, and one-third is expected to be charged on the go, which we call supercharging or ultra-high power charging, where it's relevant that you don't have to wait. If we talk about that one-third of 90 terawatt-hours, that is 30 terawatt-hours. If we just take as an example the European Union, that would mean that's the amount that the demand of these 30 million cars being out there be from Portugal to Denmark, from eastern Germany to Great Britain. It's a widespread area, having that demand. What we need is we need a decentralized, in-installed base.
Now we come to the conclusion, if we have chargers with a high density, then the utilization is even going down. It's not going up. That is what we see here. If we are reaching with a battery buffer charger, utilization rates in this range, why do we need, except of highways and where people are charging bumper-to-bumper 24 hours, where do we need then a grid expansion which is expensive and might be used only a portion of the year? Next page, please. Saying that, I want to go a little bit deeper to explain, here we see it. This is that we understand why is it so important and why is it so powerful to have battery buffer chargers being able to provide this performance.
This is now the proof. It's a timeframe. It's a session of one car. The car here charged 25 minutes. In the 25 minutes, 68, almost 70 kWh of energy has been delivered. The power rate was pretty high. It went up to 268 kW. That is, let's say it's the upper level of the charging power, which is taken today from a car. What we see on the right side is the dark blue shaped area. That is what we get from the grid. In this case, the remaining capacity we have, we got was 100 K. We see that the car at the beginning and then over that period of time, what is it?
20 minutes, something like that, or 80 minutes, the car's asking for more than the more than the 100 kilowatt hours. That is the light blue shaped area. This energy is provided by the internal battery. We see in the green segment, and that's the second graph, we see how the internal battery drains. What we can see, that until the demand from the car hits the supply from the grid, we are only dropping from a State of Charge from 100 to, let's say, roughly 80, it's above 80. We are already recharging the internal battery. It's kind of a breathing system, where we only need for a specific time or where we boost the demand of the car.
For the user, it's a great experience because in these 20 minutes, he can charge 30%, 40%, 50% more of electricity. That saves time, it makes it very convenient, and you can do that almost anywhere. On sites being available, it can be used for private charging, which allows us then to integrate our own photovoltaic. We know how expensive electricity now is. We know in Germany, for example, I know that it's in San Francisco the same, that solar on the rooftop is getting. It's a mandate. If people are having solar generators on their rooftops, it makes absolutely sense to use this CO2 free and this cheap electricity on your own premises, on your own site. The battery buffer chargers, they help you now in more than one way.
They give you a supercharge, which is convenient, but at the same time, they help you storing your own electricity and using what you have harvested on your own site. Next page, please. The question now is from many people, okay, that is a one-shot. We have one session. What if there is more than just one session? This is real data, what we see here. We see a time frame of one week. It's 13th of March until 20th of March. We see in one week, and that is now. It's current. It's installation here in Stuttgart. 139 charging sessions ending up in almost 6 megawatt-hours of delivered energy to the cars. What we see here, the blue line, the spikes are the charging sessions.
We see that the power went up to 268 as well. Also the premium cars have been used and go there for charging. More important is that we only see one term that the internal battery dropped down to a level which is, it's not zero, but it's close. It went down. That is for this investment, it's 6 megawatt-hours. If we just assume that's an example, we would sell the electricity on EUR 0.0065 per kilowatt-hours. That would end up in revenue just from this charging of almost EUR 4,000 a week. On an annual basis, roughly EUR 200,000 or whatever you take on the utilization over the year.
What we want to show here that the idea when we presented that, when we started together with Porsche developing that product, nobody had the real data. In many, many discussion, also during the PIPE presentations I made, the question was, okay, If there was one car charging, we understand it, but therefore it's very expensive. What if there are more than one? In combination with what I just mentioned about, yeah, if we really have 30 million cars out there, and there will be more charging opportunities than we really need. There will be a distributed utilization for the chargers, and people will always charge where it's convenient and where it's cheap. We will get a distributed behavior, and that means at the end, only making revenues out of selling electrons might be not a business on any site.
It might very high frequented sites on the autobahn for sure. We want to charge wherever we are. Next page, please. This is something we see now on our customer base, and I'm proud to show you some examples because it's always about pictures and what they tell us and where we see that it's real. Just some impressions here. The picture on the upper side of the slide, that's the new headquarter of Porsche, the Porsche Tower in Stuttgart. It's their flagship store. That building has been completely new, brand new. Even there, they decided to put two ChargeBoxes in front of the main entrance, together with two with four dispensers.
Two of them are public, two of them are only for internal use for Porsche. We see even in, even in this infrastructure where, you know, and that's a flagship store where many, many people are coming in, and where people are ordering cars for test drives, the ChargeBox has been chosen and not a good connection. We see on the left side, the green picture. This is a fleet in Austria. Why have I picked that picture to explain it here in the earnings call? I see a very strong business coming from people owning office buildings and fleets. Normally, every company are having more than 200 people or a fleet of 20, 30 cars. In the near upcoming future, they must have EVs. Let's say 20%, 30% of the total amount will be pure EVs.
In that case, it absolutely makes sense that the management, the guests, employees can charge just in case, also in a short period of time. For sure, you will have the low-power chargers, and that's no doubt. Here we see they have a fleet, and the fleet must be operated 24 hours, and therefore, they cannot afford to go to a supercharge park whenever they need to recharge. That is why they needed a charger at their own premises inside. Here we see there is very less space, but the ChargeBox can handle that. It's easy to install. We can split the dispensers away from the ChargeBox, and that's exactly what they did. Not again talking about additional business models, which I mentioned, it's only charging, and even there, it makes sense.
Modern buildings, and we talk also to real estate development companies, they will, in the future, not only offer an elevator or an air condition, they also will offer charging. We see here, the gas stations. I don't wanna mention that in detail, but here we see also in Berlin downtown, they ripped out the vacuum cleaner, put in two dispensers and the cube just close to the transformer. You have an upgrade for a gas station. Next, please. Important also, and I mentioned that, is the opportunity to charge downtown and wherever people are, and that is mainly what we see here, whether it's fast food restaurants. On the left side, one more gas station, but on the right side, we also see a residential area in Spain.
In Spain, normally the grid connection is very weak. Most of the people have only a single-phase connection to their private homes. If now EVs are kicking in and people getting EVs as a private car, where do you charge? The average people are driving is about 200 km a week. If you share a charger like the ChargeBox in a community or an apartment house or condominium, then people do that once a week. That's only about 50 charging sessions a year, if we calculate that, so they can have a shared service.
Just in case, when you come home, you make a brief stop whenever it's needed, and you fill up your car in, let's say, 10 to 20 minutes, and just checking your email, so you don't even get out of the car. We expect that to be more as well together with our partners and installers and infrastructure developers, because now cities are always also asking about charging infrastructure, not only the level 2 low-power chargers where people need to stay 7 to 10 hours or more. Next page, please. Now we speed up a little bit so that we have time for Q&A. We see here, and I mentioned it at the beginning, that we are now going into different segments. The gas stations we mentioned already, also the fast food restaurants. Here we see another one.
On the left side, that is now a construction company. The owner of the company is well-known here. He got his first EV. The first decision he was taking is that I need a supercharger directly on my site. I'm not willing to drive to a park. It must be convenient for me, for my customers, for my employees. We see that on the left. The funny thing is, at the beginning, he opened it for the public, and then it was so occupied that he needed to close it again because it was really a hotspot. Next page, please. That shall be then also my last one before I hand over to Q&A, but I just want to give an impression what is in front of us.
It took some time. It took time, yeah, to get the technology done, to develop everything, to get the production up and running. We have recently we had or we're having that all the time, that infrastructure investors want to see also the facility, the quality. They're doing due diligence on our also production and quality assurance, because if you really scale, then that is important as well. What we see on the left side, it has been already communicated, that is a site of our new partner, Amperio. Amperio is a daughter company of Slate Asset Management, a huge in-infrastructure fund having own sites and also other sites. We see here the first installations. They have ordered 100 units now of the ChargePost.
We see even existing parking spot. This here is a parking house, can be expanded or can be equipped with a supercharger, and therefore here the ChargeBox or the ChargePost is the right solution. Not only cars, this is now what I wanted to mention, that the segments are going to be expanded. We see trucks here. The upper picture is a truck in the Netherlands, where we see now that this business is also going to be electric, and they like that we can charge up to 300 K. On the right side, we see a bus. That's a bus which is operating in Luxembourg.
Last but not least, I mentioned the EV boating business. We see sport boats, but even bigger boats now being fully electric on the lakes. We expect that more and more lakes will request electric-powered boats also for the water sports. That is the first installation for Artemis. If you're interested, you'll find on Google, if you type in Artemis and charging station, you will see these pictures as well. Before we run out of time, thank you for listening to me. I want to summarize so far that we really see now that the business is ramping up in different segments as I tried to show, because it's always to see what's happening and not only to hear it.
I wanted to point out how solid and how powerful the services and the performance of the system itself are and what they can deliver also on the utilization side. With that, thank you very much, and I want to hand it over to Q&A. Who is taking over that?
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you'd like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. A reminder, to ask a question, you will need to dial in with the telephone details already provided. The first question comes from Pavel Molchanov with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Thank you for taking the questions and appreciate all the detail in your comments earlier. Let me first ask about the outlook for 2023. Of the EUR 100 million of revenue that you are expecting, how much was originally supposed to have come in 2022?
Yeah. Hi, Pavel. How are you? Nice talking to you. It's of course, hard to assess in an infrastructure business how much, you know, is shifting from one year to the other. You know, give it over to Thomas just from some strategic aspects to that.
Pavel. We took out from last year because I mentioned that we had problems by end of the year with the units we have produced, but so far have not gone out to the customers, so we have been very conservative on that. Last year, if we take that on top, it has been more. Okay? Let's say me that one. It has been more, so we have been conservative in this case.
Okay. Can you share how much, you know, because we're now in May, can you share how much revenue approximately you had in the March quarter?
No.
Yeah. Hi, Pavel. We are currently not sharing any quarter information because we just finished the fiscal year audit, and we are now focusing on the numbers of the first and second quarter. As you know, like last year, we will come out with half year numbers as soon as they're ready.
Okay.
you have seen-
Geographic-
Yeah. Sorry.
Yep.
Go ahead.
Oh, please go ahead.
No, no. I just wanted to say that in the press release we made today that we also have stated that other new customers came in and the volume we have also disclosed. If you look at that and take all the information you get, you might get a picture, but we are not able, as Wolfgang said, to communicate it now.
Okay. What is the geographic mix that you anticipate in 2023 revenue between Germany, other Europe, and US?
Yes. The expectation is that in the US, we will be in percentage, it will be 10%-15%. Because why? We started in Europe many years earlier than in the US. It is important to understand that, and I tried to mention that at the beginning of the call, infrastructure business is not a off-the-shelf business. You have to get into detailed communication in testing phases in all the approvals. Now even if the system is certified, that doesn't matter. It takes time. We see in the US that we have a strong pipeline, but we started with initial installations and testing and approval sites, and that is the reason why I think, and that is the plan that the US will have a delay in the growth, but it will be a huge market.
That is the reason why we have, and that has been the right decision to start in Alabama. We have made the right decision to have our own service station in the US because systems are out and running in the US and not less. If you ask me about 2023, so my expectation would be it's between 10% and 15% in the US, but that's not the end, it's just the beginning. That's difficult to understand because if you start a new business in a new, in a new area with a new market, with, you know, not many EVs now out in the market, then it takes time. We saw exactly the same in Europe and in Germany.
To finally answer your question about Europe, we see it will be a distribution between Germany and also the other European countries, including Switzerland and Austria. We also see that Great Britain is a big opportunity. The detailed share, which of the country will take what, I cannot even say because when we are, you know, and that is our business model, delivering to our customers, then normally it's that they have the sites and we don't even know exactly today where they are installing the units. Just an example for you, if we get an order of 100 units from Imperial, which is the case, then we do not know today where the installation will be. I just cannot tell it now.
We might tell it later when the installation has been done.
My last question is, can we get an update, please, on the residential energy product that you have been working on?
As I already communicated, we have not stopped working on it. On a lower level of priority because we need all our resources for 2022, as I mentioned, first of all for the replacement to rescue the material issue and also to get the ChargePost out as planned. That has just been a resource issue. The second is we are now observing, you know, that the whole market is booming. Myself, I'm the president of the German Energy Storage Association, we see that now more and more off-the-shelf products also from Asia are kicking in. We are a little bit in a observation role because now we're coming back to the business model.
For ADS-TEC and our view, it makes only sense if we can get into business partnerships where we are not only asked for the hardware and the basic software, but for the complete scope, including services and long-term business cases. If it's only going into the business in the direction of bulkware, where price is the main focus, then I think we should reconsider and mainly concentrate on the business where we see that the company strategy can fully play out. Have we stopped it? No. Are we pushing it right now? No as well. Are we a little bit, or are we observing what the market is doing? Yes.
If we look at the new companies are out there, you might have seen that you now can order over the internet, and installers are picking up the systems. We have seen now that they are get China de-deliveries directly on their premises or on their site, so there's nothing in between anymore. That's the reason, Pavel, why we are here a little bit in a careful or not bullish role for the company. We want to go into business, which is core for ADS-TEC.
Okay. Thank you very much.
Thanks, Pavel.
The next question comes from Matt Summerville with D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.
Hi, this is Canyon Hayes for Matt Summerville. Thanks for taking my questions.
You're welcome. Hi.
Just in your pathway to sustained free cash flow positivity, how much incremental capital do you foresee needing?
Could you repeat it? Because it was, I couldn't get really hear you.
Sorry about that. In your pathway to sustained free cash flow positivity, how much incremental capital do you foresee needing to make that happen?
As we said, we do not anticipate any increase in equity in the foreseeable future. If we achieve our goals and targets, which we have communicated in that call, we are not envisaging to raise additional equity.
Thank you. Could I get a little bit more color on potentially why customers were not picking up orders from Alabama?
Yes. Yes, yes, you can. I mean, as Thomas pointed out, some of the customers in the United States have not picked up some of the products. We, as we pointed out, we are an infrastructure business. Of course, we have to be careful because we cannot name our customers, and we should not, you know, give any hints to who they are. In infrastructure, we see cases in which customers were not successful acquiring sites, were not successful acquiring both public and private funding, and therefore, they could not take the systems at that point. That's, say in a nutshell, Thomas, what it is, isn't it?
Yeah.
Great. Thank you for that color.
This concludes our question-.
That, yeah.
Mm-hmm.
No. Please go ahead, operator.
Oh, thank you. This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Wolfgang Breme for any closing remarks.
Okay. Thank you, operator. Ladies and gentlemen, this ends our ADS-TEC Energy's 2022 earnings call. Thank you very much for joining and for your continued interest in our business. Stay tuned and have a good day wherever you are. Bye-bye.
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.