Discover the full directors' dealings record of Volta Inc., a listed issuer based in United States. Shares trade on US US, under the supervision of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Energy sector, Volta Inc. has published 64 reports. The latest transaction was filed on 26 May 2022 — Attribution. Among the most active insiders: Wendel Christopher. All data is free.
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Volta Inc. (ticker: VLTA) is a United States company listed on the NYSE and known for its electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure business. Volta differentiated itself with a media-enabled charging network, combining EV charging hardware with digital advertising screens at charging locations. That model helped the company target high-traffic destination sites such as shopping centers, grocery stores, pharmacies, and other retail or community venues. Volta was founded in 2010 by Scott Mercer and Christopher Wendel, and it later came to market through a SPAC transaction in 2021. Its business has historically included the development, installation, operation, and maintenance of charging stations, alongside media monetization and certain infrastructure deployment services. From a competitive standpoint, Volta positioned itself as a niche player in the U.S. EV charging landscape rather than as a pure-scale hardware vendor. Its appeal rested on a combination of premium site selection, user experience, and a dual-revenue model that could be attractive both to site hosts and advertisers. The company built a network across multiple U.S. states and territories through partnerships with retailers, commercial property owners, and municipalities. Key offerings included charging stations, site installation, network operations, maintenance, and advertising inventory tied to the charging network. In its recent corporate history, Volta’s most significant event was the announcement that Shell USA, Inc. agreed to acquire the company in 2023. Strategically, that transaction underscored the role of large energy companies in EV charging and the consolidation trend in the sector. It also highlighted the execution and financing challenges typical of capital-intensive infrastructure platforms. For investors, Volta is best viewed as a transition-energy case study: a company whose market value has been shaped by deployment scale, monetization mix, and the ability to secure premium locations in a highly competitive U.S. market. In the United States, Volta’s story also reflects broader industry dynamics: rapid EV adoption, changing incentive structures, and a crowded charging ecosystem. While the company’s exact operating footprint has evolved over time, its core identity remains tied to EV charging, site partnerships, and media-enabled monetization. For French-, Belgian-, and Swiss-based investors, the relevant takeaway is that Volta has been more than a simple charger operator; it has been an infrastructure-and-advertising platform exposed to both mobility electrification and the economics of retail traffic.