Bangkok Post

Global EV sales seen falling 18%

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FRANKFURT: Worldwide electric car registrati­ons are set to fall 18% this year, but those of combustion engine cars are set to drop even faster, according to BloombergN­EF (BNEF), as the automotive sector is hammered by the coronaviru­s crisis.

In a report, BNEF forecast registrati­ons of combustion engine cars would drop 23% in 2020.

The temporary closure of showrooms amid lockdowns to contain the spread of the Covid-19 virus has disrupted sales and undermined consumer confidence, BNEF said in its annual global outlook for electric vehicles yesterday.

“The Covid-19 pandemic is set to cause a major downturn in global auto sales in 2020,” said Colin McKerrache­r, head of advanced transport at BNEF.

“The long-term trajectory has not changed, but the market will be bumpy for the next three years,” he added.

BNEF forecast electric models would reach 31% of the overall car fleet by 2040 and account for 58% of new passenger car sales by that date, as combustion engine cars gradually decline from their peak in 2017.

Electric car sales this year were forecast at 1.7 million, adding to the 7 million already on the road.

The figures have implicatio­ns for oil and electricit­y markets.

“The electrific­ation of transport, driven by anti-pollution legislatio­n, is forecast to remove 17.6 million barrels per day (bpd) of oil demand by 2040, up

from one million bpd currently, while electric cars could add 5.2% to power demand by that date,’’ BNEF estimated.

It also forecast the world would need around 290 million charging points by 2040, of which 12 million would be in public places and the rest at home, workplaces, or private commercial sites.

The report also saw prospects for growth of fuel-cell vehicles. These could account for 3.9% of heavy-duty commercial vehicle sales and 6.5% of municipal bus sales by 2040.

 ??  ?? Shells of Porsche Taycan fullelectr­ic sports cars are lined up at the production site of the German car manufactur­er in Stuttgart on May 12 as the production was re-started.
Shells of Porsche Taycan fullelectr­ic sports cars are lined up at the production site of the German car manufactur­er in Stuttgart on May 12 as the production was re-started.

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