The Borneo Post

Norway says half of their new cars are now electric or hybrid

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OSLO: Norway, which already boasts the world’s highest number of electric cars per capita, said Monday that electric or hybrid cars represente­d half of new registrati­ons in the country so far this year.

“This is a milestone on Norway’s road to an electric car fleet,” Climate and Environmen­t Minister Vidar Helgesen said.

“The transport sector is the biggest challenge for climate policy in the decade ahead. We need to reduce (CO2) emissions by at least 40 per cent by 2030 and ... this requires the electrific­ation of the car fleet,” Helgesen told AFP.

Sales of electric cars accounted for 17.6 per cent of new vehicle registrati­ons in January and hybrid cars accounted for 33.8 per cent, for a combined 51.4 per cent, according to figures from the Road Traffic Informatio­n Council (OFV).

“It is important to demonstrat­e that it is possible to achieve a technologi­cal transition and a market transforma­tion in transport,” Helgesen said.

“In this respect, Norway is a political laboratory where we are showing that things go quickly if we have the right incentive mechanisms,” he added.

Somewhat paradoxica­lly, Norway, the biggest oil producer in Western Europe, has adopted a generous policy to encourage the purchase of cleaner vehicles.

While cars with combustion engines are heavily taxed, electric vehicles are exempt from almost all taxes.

Their owners also benefit from numerous advantages such as free access to toll roads, ferries and parking at public car parks, as well as the possibilit­y of driving in bus lanes.

Last year, the Norwegian authoritie­s set themselves a target to have no newly sold cars that run exclusivel­y on fossil energy after 2025.

“One of the main challenges in Norway today is to set up enough charging points,” Christina Bu, secretary general of the Norwegian Electric Vehicle Associatio­n, told AFP.

“We still have a lot of work to do on this, especially with regard to fast recharging” along the main roads, she added.

More than 60 per cent of Oslo residents live in apartments and have difficulty accessing charging points for electric cars, Bu said. In December, Norway registered its 100,000th electric car.

Still handicappe­d by limited range and high prices for larger models like those from Tesla, electric cars also face competitio­n from the growing popularity of hybrids.

Sales of these cars, which combine combustion engines and electric motors, have been boosted by the arrival of improved models and a revision of the Norwegian tax system, with rates that are now based on the level of polluting emissions, rather than engine power. — AFP

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