Arab Times

Spain hopes to jumpstart EV industry with EU funds

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BARCELONA, Spain, June 23, (AP): Daniel Sánchez is one of the luckier electric car owners in Spain. With a free recharging station less than a kilometer from his home just north of Barcelona, he can keep his Tesla ready to roll.

“I cannot imagine stopping at a gas station ever again,” the 41-year-old transport company owner said. “We feel like those people who got off a horse-drawn carriage and climbed into a car. There is no going back.”

Other Spaniards are considerab­ly less enthusiast­ic. The dearth of places to plug in, compared to western and northern Europe, and the price of electric cars have left Spain lagging as the continent races to get greener.

Now the government wants to usher the entire country into this new paradigm.

The ruling left-wing coalition plans to use a chunk of the 140 billion euros ($166 billion) Spain is set to receive from the European Union’s pandemic recovery plan to kickstart its electric car industry.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen visited Madrid on Wednesday, at the start of her tour of member states to endorse their plans to deploy the massive windfall designed to erase the economic pain of the pandemic. Final approval from Brussels is expected in coming weeks.

Von der Leyen met with Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, who has compared the EU Next Generation funds to a “new Marshall Plan.”

Spain’s Secretary of State for Industry Raül Blanco told The Associated Press that the government is aiming at spending around 5 billion euros ($6 billion) over the next three years on its electric vehicle initiative.

Spain produced 2.2 million cars and trucks in 2020, second only to Germany in Europe. But only 140,000 of these were electric or hybrids, according to ANFAC, the Spanish Associatio­n of Automobile and Truck Manufactur­ers.

“What we are doing is accelerati­ng a change that is already taking place,” Blanco said. “This is a unique opportunit­y. The automakers are on board, and there are resources to carry out the investment­s.”

Roads

A leader in highspeed electric trains, Spain wants to put 250,000 more electric vehicles on its roads within two years, adding to the current 96,000.

The push for electric cars should reduce CO2 emissions by 450,000 tons, according to government projection­s as Spain aims to completely convert to renewable energy by 2050, in line with EU targets.

“Spain can carry out these industrial activities with green energy,” Blanco said. “Compared to other countries of central and eastern Europe that still rely on fossil fuels, or other countries which use nuclear, Spain can rely on renewable energies since it has wind and solar.”

The environmen­tal group Greenpeace supported the push for electric vehicles but argued that the EU funds should not be used to keep clogging cities with cars.

“It is vital that the aid is prioritize­d to help rural population­s that have poorer access to other modes of alternativ­e transport,” the group said.

Spain is counting on its robust car industry, and the deposits of lithium — key to battery production for electric vehicles — that it shares with Portugal. The goal is to establish a supply chain by encouragin­g private investment to build a battery factory, along with assembly plants and software design, all with the goal of driving more climate-friendly cars off production lines.

The plan’s success, however, faces hurdles.

Spain has fewer than 2 public plug-in points per 100,000 square kilometers, compared to over 10 in Germany, Belgium and the Netherland­s, according to a 2020 report by the European Court of Auditors.

“It is a snake that bites its own tail,” said Salvador Ejarque, president of Spain’s Associatio­n of Electric Car Users, or AUVE. “People don’t buy cars because they can’t charge them, and those who can invest don’t do it quickly enough because the bureaucrac­y is complex and slow going,”

Boost

The government wants to boost the total number of recharging points nationwide from 11,500 to 100,000 in three years. ANFAC, the carmakers’ group, said more may be needed. “We must overcome the ‘autonomy anxiety’ of drivers by assuring them that charging their car is as easy as filling up with gas,” spokesman José López-Tafall told the AP. “It is necessary to set up a calendar with set goals to reach 340,000 charging points by 2030.”

Price, too, matters. The average annual income in Spain is 15,000 euros ($18,100) below the EU mean. Luxury cars are a rare sight in Spanish cities, where economy models and motorbikes reign. So while electric vehicles can lure more affluent Europeans, they give many Spaniards sticker shock.

To overcome this, the government has already dedicated 400 million euros ($484 million) for rebates of up to 7,000 euros ($8,400) on purchases of electric and hybrid vehicles.

It must also convince carmakers that Spain is their best investment bet, while Germany and France have the advantage of having major manufactur­ers based in their countries.

Spanish carmaker SEAT, a member of the Volkswagen group, has committed to producing an electric car in the 20,000-25,000 euro range that Blanco believes will hit the price points for domestic shoppers.

Ford’s president for Europe, Stuart Rowley, spoke with Prime Minister Sánchez in April about “Ford’s battery sourcing strategy and the importance of support from the Spanish Government in the framework of the EU Next Generation funds,” the company said in a statement provided to the AP.

Renault has also reaffirmed its focus on making hybrids at its Spanish plants.

Labor unions have welcomed the huge public investment in an industry that provides 10% of Spain’s GDP and 9% of its employment.

 ??  ?? A man charges his electric car at an electrical charging point in Rivas Vaciamadri­d, Spain, Tuesday, June 15, 2021. (AP)
A man charges his electric car at an electrical charging point in Rivas Vaciamadri­d, Spain, Tuesday, June 15, 2021. (AP)

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