Inside the industry: More leadership is needed to promote EVs

Inside the industry: More leadership is needed to promote EVs

Autocar

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One in 20 new cars this year have been pure-electric models

Whether you like it or not, widespread adoption of EVs is coming - we need to prepare

If you have read our recent story on EV adoption, you could be forgiven for thinking that electric cars will never serve your needs. For the majority, that’s nonsense, but for a very few, it could be true, range, price and infrastructure leading the concerns.

Just accept now that you are going to have to compromise or, potentially, stop buying new cars from 2030. Change is coming whether it suits you or not. For generations used only to progress, that may be hard to swallow, but here the reset button is being hit, with all the pros and cons that entails.

In fact, change is already crystallising before our eyes. UK EV sales have been growing exponentially in recent years. To the end of August, 44,708 fully electric vehicles had been registered in 2020, taking a market share of 4.9%. For comparison, 2019’s total stood at 37,850 registrations (1.6% of the total) and 2018’s 15,510 (0.7%). It’s a bit of a flight of fancy that won’t be realised, but if that rate of growth were maintained, then all the hoo-ha over whether to ban the sale of combustion-powered cars from 2030, 2032 or 2035 would be academic, as we’ll get there within five anyway.

But even the most ardent EV supporters must accept there’s a huge difference between growing popularity and mass – or enforced – adoption. This isn’t just about technological change, but rather the broader picture of societal change, taking in everything from energy creation and home building regulations to the viability of automotive manufacturing, retail and aftermarket employment. It’s a fundamental shift in a short space of time.

What’s needed is leadership. Ford’s UK MD, Andy Barratt, recently raised eyebrows when he called for a minister for electrification to be appointed. Too right, although better perhaps to make it a non-political appointment.

The to-do list? The momentum can’t waiver, but today most car makers are delivering. Better to focus on driving up range and down costs. For starters, the UK’s leadership in academic research is in part worldleading, and deserves better funding, and UK battery capability needs rapidly accelerating. Then there’s the mishmash of today’s charging infrastructure, much of which is excellent, some of which is terrible and needs fixing. A cull – or at least some competitive requirements – are urgently needed.

In future years, there will be ebbs and flows in the pace of EV uptake, but even in these economically straitened times, only a fool would question the long-term direction of travel: for the short to mid-term at least, there is no alternative, and we need to prepare for it. 

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