GLOBAL sales of fully electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles rose by an annual 30.5 percent in September, as China surpassed its record numbers recorded in August and Europe resumed growth, market research firm Rho Motion said on Tuesday.
Gains in the US market have been slow and steady in anticipation of the November 5 election, which makes it difficult to predict future trends in the country, data manager Charles Lester told Reuters.
Chinese carmakers are seeking to grow their sales in the EU despite import duties of up to 45 percent and amid cooling global demand for electric cars. Chinese and European automakers were going head-to-head at the Paris car show on Monday.
EVs ― whether fully electric (BEV) or plug-in hybrids (PHEVs) ― sold worldwide reached 1.69 million in September, Rho Motion data showed.
Sales in China jumped 47.9 percent in September and reached 1.12 million vehicles, while in the United States and Canada, they were up 4.3 percent to 0.15 million.
In Europe, EV sales rose 4.2 percent to 0.3 million units, thanks to a 24 percent jump in the United Kingdom and gains in Italy, Germany and Denmark, Lester said.
In the Chinese market, the penetration rate of BEV and PHEV is growing faster than some expected, and sales “could be a record every month until the end of the year,” Lester said.
He added that Germany’s 7 percent year-on-year growth was “definitely positive news” and that intermediate carbon emission reduction goals set in the EU for next year will test the bloc’s market.
Rho Motion expects EV sales in Europe to reach 3.78 million vehicles in 2025 and 9.78 million in 2030, respectively 24 percent and 19 percent lower than previous estimates, automotive research lead William Roberts told Reuters.
France announced plans earlier this month to reduce its support for EV buyers, while Germany in September agreed on tax relief for companies on their EV sales, after ending a subsidy scheme designed to help speed up the green transition last year.
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