The Northern Advocate

NZTA tells dealers to repay rebates on almost 200 EVs

- Eloise Gibson of RNZ

Waka Kotahi/New Zealand Transport Agency (NZTA) has found almost 200 cases where car dealers pocketed electric vehicle subsidies of up to $7000 per car, then broke the law by selling them on too quickly.

The dealers signed declaratio­ns saying they would keep the cars as demonstrat­ion, courtesy or company vehicles for at least three months, but did not comply.

The transport agency has told the car yards — which it has not identified — to pay back the money.

Almost a fifth of government subsidies claimed for electric vehicles during December — the final month of the Clean Car Discount — went to car yards, rather than individual buyers.

Over the life of the scheme, just over 192,000 rebates were paid; 21,000 of them to dealers — a little over a tenth.

Internal advice released to RNZ under the Official Informatio­n Act shows the Ministry of Transport told NZTA when the scheme was launched that giving rebates to car dealers who onsold cars quickly was not consistent with Government policy of giving rebates to “consumers”.

It would be consistent with policy, however, if dealers signed a declaratio­n saying they would keep the cars themselves for three months. It was not clear why it stipulated a period of three months.

In December, more than 10,000 subsidies were claimed: 1906 to car dealers, compared with 8488 payments to individual purchasers.

NZTA said the flurry of car yard rebates in that month prompted it to

NZTA said the flurry of car yard rebates in that month prompted it to step up compliance monitoring.

step up compliance monitoring.

Earlier this year, a would-be buyer approached RNZ, saying they had been offered cars in January and February from dealers who told them they had registered the vehicles to themselves — the car yard — in December, in order to claim subsidies before the rebates ended.

At first, the agency said it had received only one complaint of abuse of the scheme.

However, it later emerged that an anonymous complainan­t had supplied the agency with details of more than 200 vehicles they said were wrongly advertised for sale by car dealers who had claimed rebates themselves, while still within the three-month stand-down period.

The complainan­t asked the agency to investigat­e possible breaches covering 231 advertised vehicles across 51 dealers.

It was not clear how many of those alleged breaches were among the vehicles for which NZTA was now requiring repayment.

Initially, NZTA looked into the tipoff and told the complainan­t’s representa­tive that staff believed just six of the listings were in breach.

Meanwhile, another complainan­t who spoke to RNZ after he was offered a car still within the three month, no-resale period has been told his complaint would not result in enforcemen­t action.

NZTA told the man, who did not wish to be named, that the dealer’s offer to sell the car to him was a breach of the terms and conditions of the rebate.

But because the dealer never actually sold the car, NZTA gave the dealer a formal warning and did not require it to repay the money, a decision the complainan­t described as “a total cop out”.

In an email to RNZ on the latest enforcemen­t figures, the agency said it could not supply more detail: “It is important that NZTA/Waka Kotahi protects the integrity of its investigat­ions into alleged breaches of the scheme.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand