Europe is revolting against the tyranny of electric cars

Posted: April 18, 2024 by oldbrew in government, net zero, Travel
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As Scotland makes an embarrassing climbdown on its much touted ‘net zero’ targets, widespread problems with the big EV push due to public resistance are highlighted. Bad news for climate worriers and the EV industry, a glimmer of hope for nearly everyone else.
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The rest of Europe, Remainers like to tell us, is forging ahead into a glorious green future while Brexit Britain is stalling, the government backsliding one by one on its net zero commitments, says Ross Clark @ The Telegraph.

It is hard to square that narrative with what’s really going on across the channel. In March, according to data from the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association, registrations of new electric vehicles plummeted by 11.3 per cent.

In Germany – the grown-up country that’s supposed to show childish Britain how it’s done – the drop was even more precipitous at 28.9 per cent.

Apparently it’s not just Britain where motorists have gone distinctly cool on electric cars. The electric vehicle industry appears to going the same way as one of its own products when the battery charge lowers: it’s slowing rapidly to a crawl.

And it’s plain to me that the reasons in Europe are the same as they are here: electric cars are too expensive to buy, and too fussy to recharge. They have a niche as local runabouts for people with their own off-street recharging facilities, but little appeal otherwise.

Enthusiasts will point to the example of Norway, where the vehicles have a 90 per cent share of the market, but that exception merely demonstrates what has been clear for a while: people buy electric cars when the government rigs the market in their favour

In Norway, buyers of EVs pay less VAT, are given access to bus lanes or free parking in various regions, pay lower road tolls and are given the right to charge their vehicles if living in apartments. Add to that the government mandating that cars purchased in public procurement need to be zero emissions, and it’s not hard to see why sales are high.

Elsewhere, however, takeup is more moderate, and the EU’s dislike of cheap Chinese imports certainly isn’t going to help. The European Commission is currently considering whether to jack up import tariffs. This is necessary, it says, because the Chinese government is plastering the industry with unfair subsidies.

In other words, the EU is telling motorists that it wants them to go electric, but when cheaper imported products arrive on the market making it slightly more affordable for them to do so, it it cracks down on those imports. Talk about joined-up government.

It isn’t just electric cars, though. The EU is full of bluster when it is setting net zero targets, but arguably no more enthusiastic than we are about hitting them. Less so, even. Germany has a net zero target date of 2045, five years earlier than Britain, yet it has reopened coal mines.

Full article here.
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Image credit: BBC

Comments
  1. Curious George says:

    Let’s wait for another 2 years of EV sales data.

  2. Phoenix44 says:

    EVs have no inherent advantages. They are more expensive, have lower range, are more expensive to insurers and to run and more expensive to repair. People don’t buy a product that is worse than the alternative. Of course some people value reducing emissions and some vale showing their virtue, but those are expensive.

  3. oldbrew says:

    Hybrid sales could go on beyond 2035 if the electricity grid doesn’t have enough reliable capacity by then, and/or resistance to EVs means lots of old cars around indefinitely.

  4. liardetg says:

    Oh and what about electrifying road haulage? Has to be Europe wide – imports? Huge diesel 12 wheelers negate EVs. What’s to be done? Hopeless. Give up.

  5. liardetg says:

    And given today’s post by Paul Homewood on NOTALOTOFPEOPLEKNOWTHAT dealing with the lack of wind, all an EV is doing is exporting its fumes to the power station. Well away from their leafy suburb

  6. saighdear says:

    Aye, ( or is it Avoch today? :-o )  EU MPs argue about climate protection
    Who is arguing about protecting us ? Yesterday’s election .. a farce? The Greens even got votes, Liberals a waste of space between 2 ears, and the big option ?

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