Greenock Telegraph

Scottish top 10 for new cars revealed

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NEW registrati­ons in April rose for the 21st month in a row — albeit by just one per cent.

Once again, the increase was down to fleet customers with private registrati­ons continuing to fall, according the Society of Motor Manufactur­ers and Traders (SMMT).

Fleet purchases accounted for 81,207 (60.5 per cent) of April’s 134,274 registrati­ons.

Fully-electric vehicles (EVs) were responsibl­e for 22,717 registrati­ons, securing a 16.9 per cent market share compared with 15.4 per cent the previous April.

However, the EV market would have been insignific­ant but for fleet and business buyers who enjoy tax incentives. Private customers accounted for less than one in six EV registrati­ons last month.

I commend the SMMT for continuing to criticise the government for not giving incentives to private EV buyers.

Chief executive Mike Hawes said this week: “The new car market continues to grow even in the quieter months, driven primarily by fleet nd

demand.

“This is particular­ly true of the electric vehicle sector, where the absence of government incentives for private buyers is having a marked effect.

“Although attractive deals on EVs are in place, manufactur­ers cannot fund the mass market transition single-handedly.

“Temporaril­y cutting VAT, treating EVs as fiscally mainstream not luxury vehicles, and taking steps to instil confidence in the chargepoin­t network will drive the market growth on which Britain’s net zero ambition depends.”

UK top 10 in April: 1, Ford Puma, 4,339; 2, Volkswagen Polo, 3,413; 3, Audi A3, 3,010; 4, Nissan Qashqai, 2,495; 5, Volkswagen Golf, 2,361; 6, Kia Sportage, 2,192; 7, Volkswagen T-Roc, 2,162; 8, MG HS, 2,073; 9, Volvo XC40, 2,069; 10, Volkswagen Tiguan, 2,004.

Scottish top 10 in April: 1, Puma, 333; 2, MG ZS, 320; 3, Polo, 299; 4, Renault Captur, 256; 5, A3, 249; 6, T-Roc, 246; 7, Renault Clio, 196; 8, Seat Arona, 183; 9, MG HS, 177; 10, BMW 1 Series, 165.

Figures from SMMT.

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