Norway and EV trend

Discussion in 'Science and Technology' started by VicBee, Sep 23, 2021.

  1. VicBee

    VicBee

    https://electrek.co/2021/09/23/norw...-point-toward-100-ev-sales-as-early-as-april/

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    Norway’s Road Traffic Council reports monthly sales figures for all cars sold in the country, so we have accurate reports on just how many new cars of each powertrain choice get sold. In the most recent accounting, cars without any type of electrification made up less than 10% of new car sales, down from about 21% the year prior.

    If the trend present for the last few years continues, the trend line will hit zero in April 2022. This is a lot earlier than their 2025 target (which, to be clear, is not a legal requirement yet, more of a soft target agreed upon by Norway’s government).

    These statistics do count conventional hybrids as “electrified” – somewhat of a strange designation, since they still get 100% of their energy from gasoline – but all of the top vehicles can run at least partially on electricity. And conventional hybrids make up less than 10% of new car sales anyway.

    As Motor acknowledges in their article, the very last gas car probably won’t be sold in April 2022. Not every car segment has a good selection of vehicles yet, and there are always some exceptions.

    But there is a clear trend that outside of these few exceptions or niche vehicles, there will probably not be many mass-market sales of non-electrified vehicles. Norway might even allow limited numbers of gas car sales to continue past 2025, with the expectation that numbers might be small enough that a legislative ban really won’t matter either way.

    Since the start of this year, 14 of the top 15 cars in Norway are all-electric, with the RAV4 Prime, in second place, as the only plug-in hybrid in the top 15. 16th place goes to the Toyota Corolla hybrid, and we have to look all the way down to 38th place to find the first car without an electric motor in it, the VW Tiguan diesel.

    Much of the credit for Norway’s head start can be credited to strong tax incentives for electric vehicles. Gas vehicles are subject to a significant tax, and electric vehicles are exempt from that tax. As a result, you can get a much better EV, at any price, compared to price-competitive gas cars.

    But that tax exemption has stayed the same for a long time, and electric car sales just keep going up. In fact, EVs have even lost some of their perks in recent years, like free parking and toll road fee exemptions.

    What’s driving the rise in EV sales is greater variety in available vehicles and just a general cultural trend toward EVs. Since it’s becoming clear that gas cars are on the way out, nobody wants to be saddled with a vehicle they won’t be able to fuel in 10 years. Some Norwegian gas stations are already replacing pumps with chargers, after all.

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    About the Author
    Jameson Dow
    Jameson has been driving electric vehicles since 2009, and has been writing about them and about clean energy for electrek.co since 2016.

    You can contact him at jamie@electrek.co
     
  2. ipatent

    ipatent

    Pretty impressive.
     
    VicBee likes this.
  3. VicBee

    VicBee

    And what's even more impressive is that Norway is Europe's biggest oil producer and could have not given a damn about EVs.
     
  4. Overnight

    Overnight

    That's because Norway get something like 95% of their electricity from hydro-electric dams. Fricking vikings!
     
  5. ipatent

    ipatent

    I remember reading that Germany was trading excess wind power for Norwegian hydro when it wasn't windy enough.
     
  6. VicBee

    VicBee

    These fkrs invaded and butchered part of Europe looking for more hospitable land and now it turns out their land is an energy powerhouse. :D
     
  7. Overnight

    Overnight

    The irony, eh?