Khaleej Times

Electric car sales to rise but affordabil­ity in focus: IEA

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Electric car sales will rise strongly in 2024 and increasing­ly undercut oil demand, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) forecast, adding affordabil­ity and charging infrastruc­ture would be key to future growth.

Electric car sales will hit 17 million this year, compared to 14 million in 2023, with more than one in five cars sold globally set to be electric, the IEA said, predicting 10 million of those sales would be in China.

The pace of electric vehicle uptake will mean that oil demand for road transport should peak around 2025, the Paris-based watchdog said in its Global Electric Vehicle Outlook.

If countries carry through on stated energy and climate policies, some six million barrels per day (bpd) will be shaved off oil demand by 2030 and 11 million bpd by 2035 - or over a tenth of current total oil demand, the IEA said.

"Tight margins, volatile battery metal prices, high inflation, and the phase-out of purchase incentives in some countries have sparked concerns about the industry's pace of growth, but global sales data remain strong," it said of EV demand.

Sales in the first quarter of this year were up 25 per cent on the same period last year. Though that rate is unchanged from the first quarter of 2023 versus the comparable period in 2022, it comes on top of a larger base of vehicles, the IEA said.

Still, electric cars' share of total purchases will vary widely by region, representi­ng about one in nine vehicle purchases in the United States, one in four in Europe, but nearly half in China, the IEA forecast. Take up in Europe is being held back by "a generally weak outlook for passenger car sales and the phase-out of subsidies in some countries", it said.

Affordabil­ity compared to traditiona­l vehicles remains key to the sector's growth, it added, with prices again varying widely by region.

Internal combustion cars remain more affordable than their electric equivalent­s in Europe and the United States, while in China nearly two-thirds of electric cars sold last year were cheaper than their traditiona­l equivalent­s.

"Electric cars are generally getting cheaper as battery prices drop, competitio­n intensifie­s, and carmakers achieve economies of scale", the IEA said, while noting that in some cases - adjusting for inflation - prices stagnated or even rose slightly between 2018 and 2022.

Meeting the growing demand with charging infrastruc­ture will also pose a key challenge, the IEA added, with charging networks needing to grow six-fold by 2035.

 ?? — REUTERS ?? Stellantis premium brand Alfa Romeo reveals the Milano, its first fully electric car during an event in Milan earlier this month.
— REUTERS Stellantis premium brand Alfa Romeo reveals the Milano, its first fully electric car during an event in Milan earlier this month.

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