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Alternatively powered cars: Hybrids - not electrics - lead the charge

At the moment everyone seems to be waiting for a 'game changer' in terms of a big breakthrough in battery technology which could see consumers switch over in a big way.

While the pure electric vehicle (EV) may still be an important part of the car market of the future, EV sales so far have been disappointing as I’ve noted in earlier posts here at the Birmingham Post. A recent report, by PwC in its ‘Autofacts’ series, confirms this trend. It notes that Europe’s electric car market still hasn’t taken off, but rather that hybrids are seen as likely to help auto makers meet tough new environmental regulations.

While pure EVs are still seen as too expensive by many, hybrid cars are viewed as better value for money by consumers, the report argues. However, neither powertrain form will be mounting much of an assault on the ongoing dominance of the internal combustion engine (ICE) in the near future, PwC reckons, at least in the short term.

PwC surveyed 1,500 people planning to across Germany, Britain and France. Those who were thinking about having a pure (battery only) EV amounted to just 1% of those sampled, although this reached a more creditable 2% in France. (Incidentally, PwC’s figures tally with those in a recent report by IHI which stated that by 2020 electric cars will still account for under 1% of the total vehicle market).

As the PwC report notes, this is “echoed in (2014) new car registration statistics, where a collective 17,500 pure EVs were sold across all three markets out of a total of seven million vehicles sold – that’s 0.25 per cent of all new car registrations,” the report said.

The survey found that the price of EVs was much higher than conventionally powered ICE cars. In Germany, for example, prices of EVs start at around 35,000 euros, the report states, and compete in sectors where ICE powered cars cost somewhere in the range 10,000 to 30,000 euros.

Meanwhile, another report - entitled “Electric car sales pace, far from growing, is slowing” Automotive Industry Data (AID) – found that EV sales in Western Europe in August in the first eight months of 2014 EV sales were actually up to 35,228 from 20,052 in the same period of 2013. However, the growth of sales slowed during the year, according to AID (although more recent figures show a late spurt in EV sales in France).

Overall, EV market share in Western Europe in the first eight months was 0.44 per cent compared with 0.26 per cent in the same period of 2013. The figures include pure EVs like the Nissan Leaf, Renault Zoe, Tesla Model S and BMWi3 as well as extended range EVs such as the Chevrolet Volt. But these numbers were inflated by Norway’s figures, where a raft of policy measures has stimulated an EV market take-off. Without Norway, the market share figures for Western Europe fall to a disappointing 0.28 per cent according to AID.

And in the United States, consumers aren’t yet that switched on either. There, the market penetration of electric only vehicles in the first nine months of 2014 was just 0.35 per cent, according to AID.