The Borneo Post

Germany takes Euro lead from Norway in e-car sales

- By Anthony Palazzo and Elisabeth Behrmann

GERMANY has leapfrogge­d Norway as Europe’s biggest market for electrifie­d cars, a sign consumers are warming to the technology just as Volkswagen and Daimler add batteries to their lineups to take on Tesla.

Sales of electric- chargeable vehicles surged 70 per cent in Germany to 17,574 cars in the first quarter, nudging ahead of Norway for the first time, according to data from the European Automobile Manufactur­ers Associatio­n. The figure includes fully- electric cars like Tesla’s Model S, as well as plug-in hybrids such as the BMW 2- Series Active Tourer.

Volkswagen, Daimler and BMW are retooling assembly lines in response to stricter European regulation­s on combustion engines and fallout from the 2015 VW emissions- cheating scandal. While consumers have turned away from diesel — especially in Germany — carmakers are depending on customers to embrace electrifie­d powertrain­s if they are to recover the massive investment­s they’re making.

Volkswagen said that it’s awarded US$ 48 billion in contracts to battery suppliers, double from just a few weeks ago — bringing the German manufactur­er close to its 50 billion- euro target.

Across Europe, sales of electrifie­d vehicles advanced 41 per cent in the first quarter, with battery- only cars up 35 per cent and plug-in hybrids up 47 per cent, while diesel in the EU dropped 17 per cent. Germany, the region’s biggest single market, has until now trailed Norway, which jumpstarte­d electric- car sales with generous subsidies.

Norway, which held on as number one in the all- electric category, is Tesla’s third-biggest market after the US and China.

Once rare in Germany, Teslas have become increasing­ly common on the streets of cities like Munich, alongside other fully- electric models like BMW’s i3 and Nissan Motor Co.’s Leaf. Still, the California company ranked 31st in the country in 2017, well behind Volkswagen, Mercedes, BMW and Audi, the country’s dominant brands.

While the Germans have a leg up in Europe, their next challenge as the electric- car market expands will be to prove to consumers in the U.S. and China that their products are superior. Elon Musk’s recent antics, along with less-thanstella­r Model 3 quality reviews, may have opened a door.

“Tesla’s golden age is nearing its end and it will become a product among many,” said Juergen Pieper, a Frankfurtb­ased analyst with Bankhaus Metzler. “As the consumer pool for electric cars grows, tolerance over quality issues may be lower too as it’s less about the early adopters who went for Teslas based on novelty.”

 ?? — Photo by Jasper Juinen/Bloomberg ?? Electric automobile­s sit at charging stations outside EON headquarte­rs in Essen, Germany.
— Photo by Jasper Juinen/Bloomberg Electric automobile­s sit at charging stations outside EON headquarte­rs in Essen, Germany.

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