The Scotsman

Car sales stuck in slow lane as eco motors rev ahead

● Latest industry data comes as Volvo makes switch to green-only vehicles

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29 per cent. AFVS took a market share of 4.4 per cent in June, compared with 3.2 per cent during the same month in 2016.

The figures from trade body the Society of Motor Manufactur­ers and Traders (SMMT) were released as Volvo become the first traditiona­l car maker to announce that all of its new models will have an electric motor.

From 2019, the Swedish firm will only launch cars that are either pure electric or hybrids combining electric and convention­al engines.

Volvo Cars president Hakan Samuelsson said the step “marks the end of the solely combustion engine-powered car” and he hopes there will be strong demand for the vehicles in the UK.

The latest SMMT

data showed that some 1.4 million cars have been sold so far this year, down 1.3 per cent on the same period in 2016. It said the market was performing “in line with 2017 forecasts” following a record opening three months of the year.

Chief executive Mike Hawes said: “Provided consumer and business confidence holds, we expect demand to remain at a similarly high level over the coming months.

“It’s encouragin­g to see alternativ­ely fuelled vehicles experienci­ng rapid growth but adoption is still at a relatively low level and more long-term incentives are required if this new generation of vehicles is to be a more common sight on British roads.”

Charles Johnston, the boss of Edinburgh-based Dukosi, which is developing a new approach to battery cell monitoring systems that optimises how lithium-ion batteries are used in electric vehicles, said: “We are seeing a heightened interest in our technology which seems to align with what appears to be a fundamenta­l shift in focus within the auto industry to accelerate the move to electrific­ation.”

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