Business Day

Plug-in hybrid cars are 350% thirstier than claimed, according to EU

- DENIS DROPPA

It may not come as a big surprise, but your car is thirstier and more polluting than advertised. When you buy your planet-friendly, plug-in hybrid vehicle (PHEV) from a smiling salesperso­n who tells you it should get two litres per 100km and will help prevent icebergs from melting, they are usually referring to the Worldwide Harmonised Light Vehicles Test Procedures (WLTP), a global standard introduced in 2018 with the aim of giving consumers a more realistic picture of a car’s fuel economy and CO2 emission figures.

WLTP replaced the New European Driving Cycle (NEDC) used in Europe and other parts of the world, a laboratory-based test that was criticised for producing unrealisti­cally low fuel consumptio­n that wasn’t attainable on the road.

More realistic the new test might be, but diesel and petrol vehicles on the road are still about 20% higher in fuel consumptio­n and emissions than indicated by the official WLTP values. This is based on recently released data collected by the European Commission from 600,000 cars since January 2021, when it became a rule for all new cars and small vans that run on liquid fuels to be fitted with fuel consumptio­n monitoring devices to be sold in the EU.

The commission reports that petrol cars registered new in 2021 averaged 23.7% higher consumptio­n and CO2 emissions than the official typeapprov­al average, while that of diesel cars were 18.1% higher.

The commission said the gaps were anticipate­d due to different factors affecting realworld emissions which can’t be fully replicated in the WLTP test such as the traffic and road conditions, landscape, ambient temperatur­e, use of airconditi­oning and on-board electronic­s, and driver behaviour.

However, for new PHEVs first registered in 2021, the realworld consumptio­n and CO2 emissions were on average 350% higher than the typeapprov­al values, or about 4l/100km or 100g CO2/km. It confirms these vehicles are not realising their potential, largely because they are not being charged and driven fully electrical­ly as frequently as assumed, says the commission.

Unlike regular hybrids, which recuperate energy from their petrol or diesel engines while driving to keep the electric motor’s battery charged, PHEVs must be plugged in to recharge their batteries. PHEVs generally have larger battery packs than hybrid electric vehicles, which makes it possible to drive reasonable distances using just electricit­y (about 80km-100km in current models).

To address the PHEV consumptio­n discrepanc­y, the commission has introduced changes to the calculatio­n of the utility factor — the expected share of distance driven electrical­ly — which is used to determine the CO2 emissions during the official test procedure. These changes will be applied from 2025 and may be further adjusted based on real-world data.

It is not just about PHEV owners being apathetic about keeping vehicles charged, though. In our own road testing experience at Business Day Motor News, PHEVs have produced excellent economy when all was working properly, but keeping their batteries charged has sometimes proven challengin­g.

The most recent models we evaluated were the Volvo XC90 T8 Recharge and BMW XM and both had technical issues that prevented them from being charged properly.

The Volvo would not charge at a regular household wall socket as it was supposed to, so we had to take it to a Volvo dealership and juice it up at their AC wall box. Thereafter, with the XC90 operating in hybrid mode it returned an astonishin­gly frugal consumptio­n of just 1.2l/100km, even less than the 1.8l quoted by WLTP. The Swedish SUV has a range of 77km on pure electric power and, technical glitches aside, should be able to charge in a few hours at home.

The BMW XM plug-in hybrid also averaged 1.2l/100km when driven in petrol-electric hybrid mode, and about 11l in full petrol mode when the battery was drained. It, too, had technical issues though — we took it to a BMW dealer where it juiced up to a range of 18km before the charging stopped for unexplaine­d reasons.

PHEVs can be exceptiona­lly light on fuel and justify being priced higher than regular petrol or diesel cars if you’re able to keep them charged.

The difference between claimed and real fuelconsum­ption figures has caused trouble for some car companies, including Ford SA, which in 2014 had to withdraw an internet advertisem­ent that misled the public about the economy of its EcoSport. The ruling — one of several made by the former Advertisin­g Standards Authority over the same issue — found that Ford’s advert didn’t sufficient­ly inform motorists that the quoted consumptio­n figures were obtained in controlled lab conditions and thus weren’t realistica­lly attainable by customers.

Since 2008, all car dealers in SA have had to display stickers on the windscreen­s of new vehicles, informing prospectiv­e buyers how fuel efficient the vehicle is and how much carbon dioxide it emits. However, some brands reflect WLTP data while others use real-world figures gleaned from local test drives conducted by the manufactur­er. When buying a new car it’s worthwhile to ask the salesperso­n to which tests the fuel figures refer.

PHEVS CAN BE EXCEPTIONA­LLY LIGHT ON FUEL AND JUSTIFY BEING PRICED HIGHER THAN REGULAR PETROL OR DIESEL CARS

SOME BRANDS REFLECT WLTP DATA WHILE OTHERS USE REAL-WORLD FIGURES

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 ?? ?? Unlike regular hybrids which recuperate energy from their petrol/ diesel engines while driving, PHEVs must be plugged in to recharge their batteries.
Unlike regular hybrids which recuperate energy from their petrol/ diesel engines while driving, PHEVs must be plugged in to recharge their batteries.

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