The Daily Telegraph

Electric cars have ‘one third less range than advertised’

- By Gareth Corfield transport Correspond­ent

ELECTRIC cars have up to a third less range in reality than advertised, an investigat­ion has found.

Official figures for how many miles an electric car can drive after one charge are based on a standardis­ed test, done in warm conditions.

However, What Car magazine discovered that under real-world conditions, including at colder temperatur­es, cars perform much worse.

The magazine parked a dozen cars outside overnight to mimic how motorists use vehicles in the real world. Testers then drove them over a 60-mile loop on a test track in Bedfordshi­re until their batteries ran completely flat.

Steve Huntingfor­d, the magazine’s editor, said its test schedule was a better representa­tion of real-world EV range than official testing methods. “We do it every summer [and] every winter because there is obviously a sizable difference in how battery efficiency works depending on cold weather,” he said. “We leave them outside in the cold conditions [overnight] for the ambient temperatur­e … so the batteries are subjected to falling down to a lower temperatur­e and it’s the worst possible conditions to be tested in.”

Across the dozen EVS What Car tested, range was on average 29.9 per cent less than the official Worldwide Harmonised Light Vehicle Test Procedure (WLTP) figure which car makers are legally required to publish.

The £57,000 Lexus UX 300e Takumi recorded a range 100 miles shorter than its advertised figure of 273 miles. Its sibling, the Lexus RZ 450e Takumi, had the second-highest shortfall, with a range 92 miles shorter than the advertised 251. The third biggest gap between official and real-world ranges in the EVS What Car tested was from Volkswagen’s ID 7 Pro Match. The vehicle’s tested range came in at 254 miles, a third lower than the approved figure of 383 miles.

Edmund King, president of the AA, told The Telegraph that shorter-than-advertised EV ranges come as no surprise to the public. “Most drivers are aware that the miles-per-gallon figures quoted for petrol and diesel cars fall short of real world driving by about 25 per cent.

“Consumers should take these official figures with a pinch of salt as the most accurate test of charge or fuel efficiency is for drivers to take an extended test drive,” Mr King said.

A Lexus spokesman said a software update is being rolled out for its RZ 450e Takumi model to improve the content of its range display. “We’re always improving and the software update is an example of that.”

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