Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Electric car drivers hit in the wallet

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INSURERS are powering up premiums for electric cars, leading to a drop-off in demand for the cleanest and greenest cars on our roads, according to a consumer website.

HonestJohn.co.uk is calling on the government to scrap Insurance Premium Tax (IPT) for electric vehicles after it emerged that some EVs cost as much as 60 per cent more than their petrol-powered equivalent­s to insure.

The move comes after the latest industry figures from January to June show pure electric car registrati­ons are down by more than three per cent compared to the first half of 2017.

Data from the Society of Motor Manufactur­ers and Traders (SMMT) show that there were more than 1.2 million petrol and diesel cars registered between January and June 2018, yet just 7,441 electric cars left showrooms over the same six months.

HonestJohn.co.uk Managing Editor, Dan Powell said: “High list prices, range anxiety and limited access to charging points have all been routinely blamed but the issue of highly charged insurance premiums has been ignored.

“If the government is serious about getting more people into genuine zero-emission electric vehicles, rather than plug-in hybrids, then there needs to be decisive action.”

He added: “The government itself holds the key. At present, it takes 12pc off every motor insurance premium in IPT. If it removed IPT from pure electric vehicles, then premiums would instantly drop and this would improve the incentive for buyers to swap their diesel or petrol for pure electric.”

HonestJohn.co.uk‘s analysis of the insurance market revealed that pure electric cars carry a hefty premium when it comes to comprehens­ive cover, with some models up to 60 per cent more expensive to insure than their petrol or diesel counterpar­ts.

To make matters worse, it is young profession­als - the target buyers for most EVs - being hardest hit, with some insurers demanding more than £1,800 for 12 months’ cover.

“While on the one hand electric vehicles tend to be smaller and less powerful, they also need specialist parts and skills to repair so may cost more to insure in some cases,” said a spokesman for the Associatio­n of British Insurers. “But drivers can expect pressure on insurance premiums to reduce as the technology becomes more widespread.”

A test quote on similar models and car manufactur­ers from Confused. com found a female driver aged between 30 and 55 who had no motoring conviction­s showed that a petrol car with a comprehens­ive motor insurance policy was £567. Meanwhile it was £607 for a diesel car and £751 for an electric vehicle. Running the same quote for a male aged under 25 revealed that the average annual insurance policy would cost £1,484 for a petrol car, £1,592 for a diesel and a whopping £1,854 for an electric vehicle.

At GoCompare the price disparity grows. A 35-year-old accountant living in a city with five years’ no claims can expect to pay £247 when it comes to insuring a 2015 Renault Clio petrol. A similar fully comprehens­ive quote for the same firm’s electric Zoe is £395 – 60 per cent higher than the Clio, despite the fact that both are similar priced and equipped.

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