San Diego Union-Tribune

CARMAKERS CAN KISS PRE-PANDEMIC COMBUSTION CAR SALES GOODBYE

- BY COLIN MCKERRACHE­R McKerrache­r writes for Bloomberg News.

There are growing signs that global auto sales will continue their comeback from the pandemic, chip shortage and other supply chain snarls. As the recovery takes shape, it’s becoming clearer that sales of internal combustion vehicles are unlikely to ever return to pre-pandemic levels.

Calling peaks is generally a nowin endeavor. The call will either be correct but seem obvious after the fact, or wrong and cause for years of mockery. But with 2022 data now available, BNEF is confident the global market for internal combustion vehicles peaked in 2017 and is now in structural decline.

This may seem self-evident to those watching the market closely, but is likely still jarring for others. Forecasts for oil demand issued just a few years ago still assumed steady growth in sales of these vehicles well into the 2030s.

At the 2017 peak, 86 million internal combustion passenger vehicles were sold, including traditiona­l hybrids like the Toyota Prius. Battery-electric and plugin hybrid models were a tiny sliver of the market that year, accounting for just over 1 million vehicles combined.

The picture was quite different

in 2022. Combustion vehicle sales were down almost 20 percent from the peak, to 69 million, and plug-in vehicles jumped to 10.4 million.

Even if we add plug-in hybrids to the internal combustion column, the picture doesn’t change much. The market still would have peaked in 2017, and global sales in 2022 would be 72 million, still 16 percent off the high from five years earlier.

The trend in China is even

more pronounced. Plug-in vehicles made up 26 percent of vehicle sales in 2022, while combustion models were 28 percent off the 2017 peak. BNEF is expecting plug-in models to be around a third of all passenger vehicles sold there this year.

The story is similar in Europe, with internal combustion vehicle sales down significan­tly from their peak. In the U.S., EV sales are poised for a breakout year with support from the Inflation

Reduction Act.

It’s worth exploring if anything could reverse this trend. There’s a big gap in EV adoption between wealthy and emerging economies, for example. But while it’s tempting to think this could offset what’s happening in China, Europe and North America, it’s hard to see where the growth in combustion vehicle sales would come from.

Southeast Asia is a growing car market, but even there, much of the expansion is poised to be taken up by EVs rather than gasoline models. Countries including Thailand and Indonesia are pushing to become hubs for battery and EV production.

It’s a similar story in India, where EVs are on the ascent and the government has big ambitions to build up a domestic industry. Sales went from 15,000 in 2021 to almost 50,000 in 2022, and BNEF is expecting the strong growth to continue this year.

New-vehicle sales in Brazil and Mexico are largely flat, and the numbers in Africa are still very small. Combustion vehicles may eke out a minor gain this year over 2022 levels, but global deliveries won’t come anywhere near the high of 2017.

 ?? ANINDITO MUKHERJEE BLOOMBERG ?? At the 2017 peak, 86 million internal combustion passenger vehicles were sold, according to Bloomberg's research service.
ANINDITO MUKHERJEE BLOOMBERG At the 2017 peak, 86 million internal combustion passenger vehicles were sold, according to Bloomberg's research service.

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