Earlier this month, the German Bundesrat (a council of 16 German states) voted for a non-binding resolution to ban vehicles powered by gasoline and diesel by 2030.[i] This was an ideological move that is intended to place additional pressure on the European Commission to promote zero-emission vehicles. The German Transport Minister, Alexander Dobrint, calls the resolution “utter nonsense” and will not approve it were it to cross his desk.[ii]

German carmakers may have expected this resolution because Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz and BMW are producing electric vehicles and have more on the drawing board. However, despite this vote, sales of electric vehicles have decreased in Western Europe while automobile sales have increased. This is despite lucrative financial incentives for purchasing an electric vehicle in many European countries. In Germany itself, financial incentives are insufficient to promote very many electric vehicle sales.

The German Bundesrat Resolution

The resolution was passed with support from both sides of the German political system. Despite the resolution being non-binding, it is some evidence of parts of the European political system pushing for increasingly tough emissions laws and some cities (e.g. Paris) restricting the use of fossil-fuel powered vehicles.[iii] The resolution calls on the European Commission (the executive arm of the European Union) to “evaluate the recent tax and contribution practices of Member States on their effectiveness in promoting zero-emission mobility,” which may mean an end to the lower levels of tax currently levied on diesel fuel across Europe. Europe had pushed diesel vehicles, which are more efficient than gasoline vehicles, heavily after World War II. Creating an even tougher tax burden may encourage manufacturers to push electric vehicles into production sooner.

This resolution is an interesting development. The auto industry in Germany is one of the largest sectors of its economy; it represents about 2.7 percent of Germany’s gross domestic product, and vehicles and vehicle components make up 20 percent of its exports.[iv] Germany produces more automobiles than any other country in Europe and is the fourth largest in the world. It is no wonder that the German Transport Minister called the resolution “utter nonsense”.

However, German automakers are investing in electric vehicles despite lukewarm sales, which may be a signal to their commitment to going electric. For example, BMW is beginning to work on an electric Mini and an electric SUV despite its i3 series having a poor showing in the United States (i3 sales for the first 9 months of 2016 in the United States were 27 percent lower than the corresponding sales in 2015). It expects an all-electric Mini to be market-ready by 2019 and the X3 SUV to be ready by 2020. Not long ago, BMW was resistant to building an electric Mini-brand car because Minis have a smaller profit margin than BMW-brand cars, and the investment costs of building an all-electric vehicle are considerable. The Mini’s platform would have to be totally redesigned to accommodate a huge battery, and Mini factories would have to be adapted to accommodate the new model. But, despite these problems, BMW is moving forward with its electric vehicle program as is Volkswagen, who announced that it will have a long-range electric car called the I.D. in 2020. [v]

Electric Vehicle Sales Fall in Western Europe

Despite European automakers expanding their electric car models, sales of battery electric vehicles in Western Europe fell for the fourth month in a row. In August, sales of battery electric vehicles dropped by 1.2 percent compared to August 2015, despite the overall Western European new car market increasing by 8 percent. Europe is the world’s second largest electric vehicle market behind China.[vi]

This trend has resulted despite some very lucrative electric car incentives by some European governments. For example, Norway had a very lucrative incentive program where electric cars were exempt from value added tax and purchase tax, which on average added 50 percent to the cost of a vehicle. They were also exempt from road tolls, tunnel-use charges, and ferry charges, and received free parking, free charging, and the use of bus lanes. When Norway reduced the incentives to owners having to pay half of the road tax from 2018 and all of it from 2020, replacing the valued added tax exemptions with a subsidy, and allowing local authorities to decide whether to offer free parking, exemption from tolls, and the use of bus lanes,[vii] car purchasers turned away from battery electric vehicles, purchasing plug-in hybrids instead.

In France, however, the electric vehicle market is booming because of its €10,000 ($11,025US) ‘super bonus’ for purchasing a new electric car and scrapping an old diesel vehicle. Without France, sales of battery electric vehicles in Western Europe would have dropped 6.1 percent in the first eight months of 2016, and 6.7 percent in August.

Germany’s incentive of €4,000 ($4,410 US) is insufficient to get its public to purchase electric vehicles (€3,000 ($3,308 US) for hybrids). The incentive began in May and for the first three months, sales of electric vehicles totaled just 3,000 vehicles, compared to about 1.2 million new cars purchased in the first three months of Germany’s Cash for Clunkers program of 2009. Clearly, the 4,000 euros is insufficient to cover the extra expense of an electric vehicle.[viii]

Sales of battery electric vehicles in Western Europe for the first eight months of this year were as follows:

eu-ev-sales-chart

Source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/bertelschmitt/2016/10/07/evs-in-europe-hopes-high-sales-down/#5fcc67fb1343            

Conclusion

The Paris Agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions may be spearheading resolutions such as the one the German Bundesrat made that no new combustion engine cars should be allowed by 2030. Despite this push by politicians and some lucrative government incentives for their purchase, electric vehicle sales are down in Europe—the second largest market behind China—while overall vehicle purchases are up. European politicians want their people to do as they say, but it may not be what the people want, nor it may not be what is best for the economy, particularly in Germany’s case. Thus, it is “utter nonsense,” as the German Transport Minister referred to it.


[i] Ars Techinca, Germany’s Bundesrat votes to ban the internal combustion engine by 2030, October 10, 2016, http://arstechnica.com/cars/2016/10/germanys-bundesrat-votes-to-ban-the-internal-combustion-engine-by-2030/ and Gizmodo, German Lawmakers Vote to Ban the Internal Combustion Engine, http://gizmodo.com/german-lawmakers-vote-to-ban-the-internal-combustion-en-1787574000

[ii] Road and Track, German Transport Minister Calls Internal Combustion Ban “Utter Nonsense”, October 11, 2016, http://www.roadandtrack.com/new-cars/future-cars/news/a31123/german-transport-minister-calls-internal-combustion-ban/

[iii] Ars Techinca, Paris bans pre-1997 cars from its streets during the week, June 1, 2016, http://arstechnica.com/cars/2016/06/paris-bans-pre-1997-cars-from-its-streets-during-the-week/

[iv]CNN Money, What Volkswagen means to the German economy, September 23, 2015, http://money.cnn.com/2015/09/22/news/economy/volkswagen-germany-cars-economy/

[v] Ars Techinca, BMW will make an electric Mini and an electric X3 SUV after all, September 30, 2016, http://arstechnica.com/cars/2016/09/bmw-will-make-an-electric-mini-and-an-electric-x3-suv-after-all/

[vi] Forbes, EVs In Europe: Hopes Up, Sales Down, October 7, 2016, http://www.forbes.com/sites/bertelschmitt/2016/10/07/evs-in-europe-hopes-high-sales-down/#5fcc67fb1343

[vii] Quartz, Norway’s electric-car incentives were so good they had to be stopped, May 7, 2015, http://qz.com/400277/norway-electric-car-incentives-were-so-good-they-had-to-be-stopped/

[viii] Energy Transition, German EV Sales Go Nowhere, October 10, 2016, http://energytransition.de/2016/10/german-ev-sales-go-nowhere/

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