The Guardian (USA)

Australia’s most popular car brand ranked among global ‘laggards’ in EV report

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Australia’s most popular carmaker is among the slowest to transition to electric transport and the country’s most popular electric car brand has ranked as the world’s most advanced.

The ratings, released on Wednesday by the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion (ICCT), also found car manufactur­ers in Japan and India were among the slowest to move to zeroemissi­on vehicles, although all vehicle manufactur­ers had “more work to do”.

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The Global Automaker Rating 2022 report ranked the world’s top 20 lightduty vehicle makers according to 10 criteria ranging from the type of zero-emission vehicles they offered to their manufactur­ing process and future goals.

ICCT passenger vehicle program lead Zifei Yang said the vehicle brands were judged on the same criteria and given the chance to provide feedback to create an unbiased look at the state of the industry.

“Our goal with this report was to provide a data-driven, transparen­t analysis of automakers’ progress toward decarbonis­ation in their plans and actions,” she said.

The Washington-based thinktank found Tesla performed best overall, with a perfect score for its strategic vision, followed by Chinese carmaker BYD, which scored highly for market dominance.

At the other end of the rankings, Australia’s most popular vehicle brand, Toyota, rated among the “laggards” in electrific­ation and scored just 15 points out of 100 for its future plans.

The company is yet to launch an electric vehicle in Australia but has announced plans to introduce 10 batterypow­ered models by 2026.

Scoring the lowest of all manufactur­ers, however, were Japanese brands Suzuki and Mazda, with overall scores of zero and 10 out of 100 respective­ly.

Japanese and Indian auto brands were singled out for their lack of progress, with all but one manufactur­er listed among the “laggards”.

The ICCT also found a number of traditiona­l car brands had made significan­t efforts to decarbonis­e their operations, including BMW, Volkswagen and Mercedes-Benz, which were using more renewable energy in the manufactur­ing process, while Chang’an, Geely, SAIC, Stellantis and VW received praise for offering a wide range of zero-emission vehicles.

The ICCT found more commitment­s were needed from all automakers to make the transition to 100% electric vehicle sales by 2035.

“Every automaker has work to do,” the study found.

“Even Tesla’s and BYD’s ratings were weak on some metrics.

“As the transition accelerate­s, all companies must evolve and grow to keep pace with the changing market.”

The findings come one month after the federal government launched its National Electric Vehicle Strategy which included initiative­s to encourage manufactur­ers to import more low and zero-emission vehicles and support their use with more charging infrastruc­ture.

Electric vehicle sales grew to 8% of all new vehicle sales in Australia in April this year, up from 1.1% in April last year.

 ?? Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA ?? Electric vehicle sales grew to 8% of all new vehicle sales in Australia in April this year, up from 1.1% in April last year.
Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA Electric vehicle sales grew to 8% of all new vehicle sales in Australia in April this year, up from 1.1% in April last year.

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