AN ELECTRIFYING YEAR
ELECTRIC cars accounted for an astonishing quarter (26 per cent) of total car sales last month. This bucked the trend of low new car sales for the whole of 2021 — 1.65 million and the second worst performance since 1992. But a shortage of on-street chargers risks putting a brake on the Government’s electric ambitions in the run up to the sales ban of new petrol and diesel cars by 2030, says the Society of motor manufacturers and Traders (SmmT).
After 2030, only the longestrange hybrids (as yet unspecified) will be available until 2035, after which only pure electric cars will be sanctioned for sale.
The 191,000 pure electric cars sold last year (up from around 108,000 in 2020) was more than in all the previous five years combined and means nearly one in nine cars sold last year was fully electric.
Top electric seller for 2021 was the Tesla model 3 followed by the Kia e-Niro and Volkswagen
ID.3. making up the top ten were the Nissan Leaf, Audi e-tron, hyundai Kona, Renault Zoe, mini Electric, mG ZS and Vauxhall Corsa-e.
The top three plug-in hybrids were: the BmW 3 Series; mercedes-Benz A-Class and Volvo XC40.
The best-selling vehicle overall was the Ford Transit Custom van range, with nearly 54,000 sales.
Petrol cars still accounted for almost six in ten sales and diesel for around one in seven (just over 14 per cent).
This suggests pure-electric car sales should overtake diesels for the first time this year.
But mike hawes, SmmT chief executive, says the Government’s rollout of vital on-street charging points is failing to keep pace with electric car sales.
Also, the decision to slash the plug-in car grant to £1,500 and lower the price-cap eligibility means buyers are being denied a vital incentive to switch.
Regional disparities, particularly in the North and Wales, where there are fewer public charging points than in London and the South-East, risks an electric car North-South divide.
Other key challenges include the global shortage of computer chips needed in modern cars, the effect of Covid on production schedules and tougher trading arrangements due to Brexit.