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Open Charge Point Protocol (OCPP): comprehensive overview

· 3 min read
Mative CEO & Founder

The Open Charge Point Protocol (OCPP) is an open standard designed to enable communication between electric vehicle (EV) charging stations and central management systems (CSMS). Its function is comparable to communication protocols in telecommunications, ensuring interoperability across heterogeneous infrastructures.

Origins and background

OCPP was introduced in 2009 by the

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to address fragmentation in the EV charging ecosystem.

Before its introduction, manufacturers relied on proprietary protocols, resulting in isolated and incompatible systems. This significantly limited scalability and user accessibility.

OCPP established a standardized communication framework, enabling seamless integration between charging hardware and backend platforms.

OCPP operates within a broader ecosystem of complementary standards:

OCPI

The

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(OCPI) facilitates communication between Charge Point Operators (CPOs) and Mobility Service Providers (eMSPs).
It enables roaming across networks, allowing users to access multiple charging infrastructures with a single account.

ISO 15118

The

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standard supports advanced features such as:

  • Plug & Charge (automatic authentication)
  • Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G), enabling bidirectional energy flow

OpenADR

The

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protocol enables demand response management.
Utilities can signal devices to adjust consumption during peak demand or supply shortages.

Core features of OCPP

Interoperability

OCPP allows charging stations and backend systems from different vendors to communicate seamlessly, eliminating vendor lock-in.

Scalability

It is designed to support large-scale deployments, from small installations to nationwide charging networks.

Security

Includes robust security mechanisms such as TLS encryption and mutual authentication.

Smart Charging

Supports dynamic energy management by adjusting charging rates based on:

  • grid conditions
  • pricing signals
  • operational priorities

Message architecture

OCPP uses asynchronous communication with uniquely identifiable request-response pairs.
This improves resilience and efficiency in real-world network conditions.

Offline capabilities

The protocol handles intermittent connectivity through:

  • retry mechanisms
  • timestamp-based synchronization
  • local transaction storage

Protocol versions

OCPP 1.6

The most widely adopted version, featuring:

  • JSON support (in addition to SOAP/XML)
  • mature and stable functionality
  • broad industry compatibility

OCPP 2.0.1

The latest version introduces:

  • enhanced security frameworks
  • advanced smart charging capabilities
  • support for dynamic pricing models

However, lack of backward compatibility with 1.6 slows its adoption.

Strategic importance in the EV ecosystem

OCPP is considered a de facto global standard, especially in Europe and North America.
It enables:

  • interoperability across operators
  • reduced technological lock-in
  • scalable infrastructure development

It also integrates with:

  • renewable energy systems
  • energy management platforms
  • IoT and AI-driven ecosystems

Future outlook

OCPP is expected to evolve in tighter alignment with ISO 15118.
This will enable:

  • widespread adoption of Plug & Charge
  • fully automated charging workflows
  • expansion of Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) use cases

In the long term, OCPP will play a critical role in smart grid architectures, contributing to energy efficiency and grid stability in distributed energy systems.