A hot red Tesla S. Credit: Tesla |
Electric cars represent a fraction of the number of vehicles on
the road, but that’s changing—and indications are it’s soon to be
changing a lot faster.
EV sales are picking up every month, according to www.ev-volumes.com.
And if they're not quite increasing at an exponential rate, they are increasing real, real fast.
In January 2014 plug-in car sales were about 15,000 globally.
By January 2015 it was close to 25,000.
And by January of this year 40,000.
By the middle of 2016, it was approaching 70,000 plug-in
cars sold every month.
In these examples the sales include pure electric vehicles
and plug-in hybrids.
Those stats are from the consulting firm EV-Volumes, which
says growth in the plug-in market is expected to be 57 percent higher in 2016
than 2015. It says that globally, about 60 percent of the plug-ins are pure
electric and 40 percent hybrid.
By September 2016, Hawai`i had more than 4,700 electric vehicles, 27 percent or more than 1,000 more than the year before. The state had more than 22,000 hybrid cars, up 6.5 percent from a year before.
China is the biggest player in the electric vehicle field, followed by
Europe, then the U.S. and Japan.
This Forbes article cites a figure estimating 450,000
electric car sales in China in 2016.
Europe is an interesting area. The Netherlands sees electric
vehicles reaching almost 10 percent of every car sold. Holland is pushing to
reach 100 percent electric car sales by 2025.
Indeed, all of Europe is pushing hard to increase the numbers, with
both subsidies for electric car buyers and aggressive goals. Germany is talking about requiring 100 percent of new cars
to be electric by 2030.
The car manufacturers have gotten the message. More and more
of them are offering electric cars. Nissan says it expects 20 percent of its
2020 production to be emission-free.
The push is not only to push electric vehicle sales
directly, but to push back against polluting cars. Paris has banned the weekday use of cars built before 1997. The theory: they don’t have engines that
are as efficient as those built during the past 20 years, and they don’t have
the same pollution control equipment.
"We know that the major source of pollution in Paris is
traffic. Sixty-six percent of nitrogen dioxide and fine particles come from
road traffic. And we know it's old cars that spew out the most toxic fumes.
That's why we are progressively going to get rid of them,” said Christophe
Najdovsky, the Parisian deputy mayor for transport and public space.
If you’re in the market, know that the list of plug-in cars
is a long one these days. In mid-2016, according to EV-volumes, Nissan Leaf led the market, following
closely by Tesla’s Model S. Then come BYD’s Tang and Qin models, Chevy Volt,
SAIC Roewe E550, Mitsubishi’s Outlander, Renault’s Zoe, BYD’s e6, BMW’s i3 and
Tesla’s Model X—and more than a dozen others.
You may not recognize some of those names. BYD is a Chinese
car manufacturer. SAIC is a British-Chinese company.
Another sign that the industry is maturing: None of the cars on the
list is a golf-cart looking thing. They’re all sedans or SUVs.
For early adopters, the idea that their hot new EV looks just like your father's sedan could be a problem. But the industry isn't just going for early adopters any more.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2016
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