Tag Archives: EV Market

EV Sales Flatline Again In April

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

h/t Paul Kolk

Electric car sales to private consumers have plunged by a fifth amid growing concerns that the industry will miss its legal net zero targets.

A total of 22,717 electric cars were registered in April, an increase of 10.7pc compared to a year earlier, but this was overwhelmingly driven by businesses.

Sales to private consumers made up just 15.6pc of this, down from 22.1pc in 2023, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).

The actual number of electric cars sold to private consumers fell from 4,535 to 3,544, a drop of 22pc.

On Tuesday, the SMMT warned that electric vehicles (EVs) were now facing a “diminishing market share” with manufacturers set to significantly miss new sales targets put in force by the Government.

In April, overall EV market share among businesses and consumers rose from 15.4pc to 16.9pc on an annual basis.

The SMMT is forecasting that of two million cars set to be registered in 2024, just 19.8pc will be electric – down from a previous estimate of 21pc.

That means at least some car makers are on course to miss the target set by the Government’s zero emission vehicle (ZEV) mandate, which requires at least 22pc of sales to be electric from this year. Companies that miss the target are at risk of being fined. The SMMT does not break down its forecasts by manufacturer.

The ZEV mandate ratchets up further annually until it reaches 80pc in 2030, before a ban on the sale of new petrol cars in 2035.

In response to the latest figures, the SMMT reiterated calls for the Government to reinstate financial incentives for consumers buying electric cars – following the scrapping of the plug-in grant in 2022 – and said more needed to be done to ensure charging infrastructure was adequate.

It has previously demanded a cut in VAT on EV purchases that it claims would turbocharge demand.

The warning comes after figures from Auto Trader revealed that new EVs sold on the platform were being listed at record discount levels as dealerships struggled to shift them.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2024/05/07/demand-electric-vehicles-plunges-by-fifth

The SMMT really does live in its little dream world!

There is not a cat in hell’s chance that EV sales will hit even 19.8%, never mind their previous forecast of 21%:

https://www.smmt.co.uk/vehicle-data/car-registrations/

At the end of April, YTD sales of EVs were lagging at a pitiful 15.7%, barely up on last year. Their projection now assumes that EV sales will account for 22% of all sales for the rest of the year.

What does it take to persuade the SMMT that barely nobody wants to buy these useless vehicles, which are totally unfit for purpose?

As for their idea that the government should chuck more taxpayer money at EVs, enough said!

The EV market hits the brakes as sales hit a speed bump!

From Watts Up With That?

The profiles of common folks for potential EV ownership are vastly different from those of current elite EV owners.

Summary: We’re running out of elites in the wealthy countries that are buying EV’s.

Published February 26, 2024 at America Out Loud NEWS

Ronald Stein  is an engineer, Founder of PTS Advance, Author, Columnist, Energy Literacy Consultant, and Featured columnist on Energy Literacy atAmerica Out Loud NEWS.  Ron is also Senior Policy Advisor for the Heartland Institute, the Center for a Constructive Tomorrow, and co-author of the Pulitzer Prize nominated book “Clean Energy Exploitations”.

The elites have bought EV’s, and elites may continue to buy EV’s, BUT we’re quickly running out of elites!

The average debt in America is almost $60,000 across credit cards, mortgages, auto loans, and student loans. The common folks need a workhorse vehicle, not just a second car toy that sits in the garage to be used on short ventures!

Inflation has changed the way many Americans shop. Fed up with prices that remain about 19 percent on average, above where they were before the pandemic, consumers are fighting back. More Americans are buying used cars, but there has yet to be a used EV market!

Mandating a change to EV ownership and further financial austerity onto those that can least afford it, is facing a rebellion from those that need transportation. The problem is that manufacturers are loading up the “supply chain” with EV’s on dealer lots, but they’re not seeing the “demand” for EV’s coming from the public.

The current EV ownership profiles are reflected in the oligarchic elite owners are that they are:

  • Highly educated.
  • Highly compensated.
  • Multi-car families.
  • Low mileage requirements for the families’ second car, i.e., the EV.
  • Reside in a “temperate” climate like CA or FL. Almost 40% of EV’s are in CA and CA has 6 times as many EV’s as FL.

Unlike the profile of current EV owners, the owners of internal combustion engine vehicles are dramatically different from most potential EV vehicle owners.

  • Many are single-car owners,
  • Most of the potential car buyers are not as highly educated.
  • Nor as highly compensated as the elite EV owners.
  • Mandating a change to EV ownership and forced austerity, may face a rebellion from those that need affordable vehicle transportation.

EV sales are beginning to hit a speed bump.

  • Hertz, previously an eager early adopter of fleet electrification, announced a big sell-off of EVs.
  • Ford’s electric-vehicle business lost nearly $4.7 billion in 2023 and could lose another $5 billion in 2024, thus, Ford slashed EV production, having earlier pulled back on planned battery factories.
  • Unsold new EVs are piling up on dealer lots, spurring aggressive discounting.
  • “No one wants to buy used EVs”, as Fortune reports, leaving EV used-car values in free fall.

 According to one industry executive, the situation “has the potential to destroy billions” of dollars in value for auto firms.

  1. By law the credit in the Inflation Reduction Act is supposedly available only when purchasing vehicles built with materials sourced primarily in the U.S.
  • However, nearly all battery materials are currently foreign-made and will remain so for ages.
  • An Inflation Reduction Act exception allowing credit for leased vehicles built with foreign materials. Evidently, the pen is mightier than the miner.
  • Thus, leasing has soared to over half of all EV sales in America, as  leasing is the only way to capture the federal $7,500 tax credit for most EVs.

The American government provides incentives and tax deductions to transition society to EV’s, but those incentives are financial incentives for the continuation of Child Labor and Ecological Destruction “Elsewhere”. Is it ethical and moral to provide financial support to the developing countries that are mining for exotic minerals and metals to build EV batteries for Americans?

The putative EV revolution is stalling for three main reasons, and not because of “dead robots” or the other road bumps in recent news. What will happen is that.

  1. We’ll run out of money to subsidize the common folk,
  2. We’ll run out of copper and other foreign sourced special metals.
  3. Car drivers will run out of patience in putting up with inconveniences.

International Energy Agency (IEA) reports that global gasoline consumption in 2023 blew past the pre-lockdown 2019 peak, even with roughly 30 million EVs on the world’s roads, up from near zero a decade ago. The primary reason may be that EV’s are mainly 2nd vehicles with low mileage vs the high mileage workhorse vehicles that are internal combustion engines.

The CO2 emissions arising from building an EV before it gets driven revolve around a simple fact: a typical EV battery weighs about 1,000 pounds. That half-ton battery is made from a wide range of minerals, including copper, nickel, aluminum, graphite, and lithium. Accessing those minerals requires digging up and processing some 250 tons of earth per vehicle, mostly in poorer developing countries with minimal labor laws and environmental regulations.

The battery pack is a complex electrochemical system made from hundreds or thousands of parts, including sensors, safety systems, cooling or heating systems, and a boatload of power electronics.

The underlying material requirements from developing countries is the single constraint that will cause the EV stall-out before other factors kick in. All the world’s mines, both currently operating and planned, can supply only a small fraction of the 700 percent to 4,000 percent increase in various minerals like copper, lithium, nickel, cobalt, and other rare earth elements that are essential components in many of today’s rapidly growing electricity technologies that will be needed to meet the wildly ambitious EV goals.

The rate of EV adoption is currently braking before there’s a battery-dominated future because, again, we’ll run out of money, copper, etc. and political tolerance for enriching other nations—especially China, where 50 percent to 90 percent of the critical materials are now controlled and produced and will be for years yet to come, no matter how lawmakers rewrite the sourcing regulations.

AGAIN, the elites have bought them and will continue to buy them, BUT we’re running out of elites to buy EV’s !

Please share this information with your friends to further enhance conversations about Energy Literacy as Breezes and Sunshine cannot manufacture anything. Electricity CANNOT exist without crude oil !

Ronald Stein P.E.

Ambassador for Energy & Infrastructure, Co-author of the Pulitzer Prize nominated book “Clean Energy Exploitations”, policy advisor on energy literacy for The Heartland Institute, and The Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow, and National TV Commentator- Energy & Infrastructure with Rick Amato.

Ronald Stein, P.E. is an engineer, energy consultant, speaker, author of books and articles on energy literacy, environmental policy, and human rights, and Founder of PTS Advance, a California based company.

Ron advocates that energy literacy starts with the knowledge that renewable energy is only intermittent electricity generated from unreliable breezes and sunshine, as wind turbines and solar panels cannot manufacture anything for the 8 billion on this planet.

It’s OVER. The Luton Airport Fire just KILLED the EV market. Here’s why.

It does not matter how the fire started, the EVs ensure the fire spreads, because as each battery pack is heated it spreads the fire to all neighbouring vehicles as happened with the recent ferry fires.

Geoff Buys Cars

A quick ‘Geoff Reacts’ video after an evening, night and morning of trawling the internet for evidence… but it doesn’t matter. The public reaction to the Luton Airport Multi Storey Car Park Fire just killed the EV Market.

In this candid video, Geoff explains why Karen and Keith have killed the EV market as they are nod in agreement this morning over their Weetabix before Keith goes out to cut the grass and Karen goes out to moan at supermarkets.

It’s over, basically.