Manufacturer spotlight: Vauxhall

Poll

Should UK Government look to privatise our roads?

  • View Results
Subscribe to RSS feed. Sign up for our newsletter

Awards won by TheGreenCarWebsite.co.uk

The Green Apple Awards 2011 GreenFleet Award

Information

Archive

Image illustrating our Kindle Touch competition.

Germany leads switch to electric vehicles despite low incentives

Respect to our German cousins this morning as we learn that the German market for electric vehicles is the most buoyant despite offering one of the lowest subsidy rates to consumers in Europe.

According to market data released by Jato Dynamics, nearly twice as many electric vehicles  were registered in Germany in the first half of 2011 compared to the UK with 1,020 models snapped up in Germany compared to just 599 in the UK.

599 electric cars sold in Great Britain in the first half of 2011

The new findings from the automotive data experts seems to suggest that incentives aren’t the  important factor in driving consumer demand for electric vehicles; as demand in Denmark remains stubbornly low despite having the highest potential EV tax exclusions.  

Although Denmark appears to be a haven for EVs in Europe with tax exclusions that potentially amount to €20,588 per vehicle; there were only 283 registrations in the first half of 2011, representing just 0.32 per cent of all vehicles registered in the country.

The picture in Great Britain seems better however, as our home country is compared with Spain where tax incentives are around the same level (€6,500 in Spain and the equivalent of €6,400 in GB). Despite a similar tax incentive rate, five times more electric vehicles sold here than in Spain (599 versus 122) in the same period.

The picture in Sweden is also impressive, and despite cold weather conditions to deal with, the country registered an almost identical volume as Spain (111) despite subsidies per vehicle amounting to just €470.

Across Europe, total EV registrations came to 5,222 in the first half of the year.

Commenting on the findings, Gareth Hession, VP for Research at JATO said: "The discrepancies highlight the apparently low influence of price on purchase decisions across the region. Given this it’s reasonable to conclude that sales are more affected by other factors such as the degree of urban geography, market maturity and charging infrastructure than was previously thought."

These local factors include the ability to use bus lanes and free city-centre parking in Oslo and exemption from London’s Congestion Charge all of which appear to exert a greater influence than point of purchase incentives.

Jato’s  research also confirms a ten-fold increase in EV registrations across Europe compared to the first half of 2010 – 5,222 compared to 507. Incentives for electric cars across Europe include lower and zero-rated tax levels, consumer grants and free charging and parking facilities.

See also

Faye Sunderland, September 26, 2011
Filed under: Electric cars

No comments yet

No comments yet.

Leave a comment

Popular posts

Image: Biofuels: the pros and cons
Image: Hybrid cars: a guide
Image: LPG conversion: a helpful guide
The Green Piece
Available UK charge points for electric vehicles