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From: AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.global-warming,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: Germany Suffers "Spectacular" 70% Drop in Electric Car Sales
Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2024 16:19:19 -0500
Organization: AlleyCat Computing, Inc.


Germany Suffers "Spectacular" 70% Drop in Electric Car Sales 

European Carmakers Call For Delay In Emissions Restrictions As EV Demand Falters 


Germany has suffered a 'spectacular" drop in electric car sales as the European Union faces growing calls to delay its 
net zero vehicle targets.

The European Automobile Manufacturers' Association (ACEA) said sales of new battery-powered electric vehicles (EV) in 
Germany plunged by nearly 70pc to 27,024 in August.

In France, the EU's second largest market for battery electric vehicles behind Germany, deliveries fell by 33pc to 
13,143.

ACEA said 'the spectacular drop" in both countries meant that only 92,627 battery electric vehicles were registered 
across Europe last month, a fall of 43.9pc compared to a year earlier. This drove a wider 18pc drop in new car sales 
across the EU.

The collapse in EV sales comes amid concerns about their range, high prices and the lack of charging infrastructure 
across the EU.

Felipe Munoz, a global automotive analyst at JATO Dynamics, said: "The reality is that whether you look at business or 
private, electric vehicles do not convince yet."

There are concerns about demand for EVs among British drivers too. Separate data showed that the growth rate of EV 
sales in the UK had dramatically slowed. 

Some 213,500 EVs were sold in the first eight months of 2024, up by 10.5pc compared to the previous year. That compared 
to annual growth of 40.5pc over the same period in 2023, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders 
(SMMT). 

Mike Hawes, head of the SMMT, said earlier this month: "Encouraging a mass market shift to EVs remains a challenge and 
urgent action must be taken to help buyers overcome affordability issues and concerns about chargepoint provision."

Mr Munoz added that Germany's EV slump was fuelled by economic uncertainty and the EU's new tariffs on China-made 
electric cars, which has pushed up prices at the more affordable end of the market.

He predicted there will be "more problems" for Germany in the coming months amid waning enthusiasm for EVs among 
corporate fleets.

Mr Munoz said: "I don't think we will see growth. I'm not saying that we will continue to see these big drops as we 
just saw in August because sooner or later measures will be taken by the government because of strong lobbying from 
carmarkers in Germany." 

Earlier this month Volkswagen warned it may have to close a factory in its home market in the face of slumping sales. 
The car maker has also scrapped a decades-old promise to protect workers' jobs, with fears as many as 15,000 roles 
could be at risk.

The EV sales crisis prompted the ACEA to call for "urgent action" to address new EU net zero car sales rules that will 
leave European electric car manufacturers at risk of hefty fines.

The European Commission, which creates and enforces EU law, is preparing to introduce new rules for car and van makers 
designed to slash carbon emissions and encourage the adoption of electric vehicles.

The new rules require all new European cars to produce no more than 93.6g of CO2 per kilometre. Brands will be fined 
ยค95 for each gram of CO2 per kilometre over the limit, multiplied by the number of cars sold. 

The ACEA said the "continual downward trajectory" of EV sales in the bloc meant manufacturers would be at risk of 
multi-billion euro fines and said the new rules needed a rethink. It warned that demand for EVs was still well below 
the level needed for the EU's new vehicle emissions rules to work effectively.

"We are missing crucial conditions to reach the necessary boost in production and adoption of zero-emission vehicles: 
charging and hydrogen refilling infrastructure, as well as a competitive manufacturing environment, affordable green 
energy, purchase and tax incentives, and a secure supply of raw materials, hydrogen and batteries," the ACEA said. 

The Brussels-based industry body said that 902,011 battery-electric cars were registered from January to August, 
representing just 12.6pc of the market.

The ACEA urged the European Union to delay new carbon emissions targets and instead take "urgent and meaningful 
action" to reverse the sales decline. 

Top carmakers including Volkswagen, BMW and Renault have already suggested pushing back the targets, which would see 
companies fined for failing to comply.

Meanwhile, Italy urged the EU to pause its "absurd" plans to ban petrol cars by 2035 amid concerns the policy risks 
triggering the automotive industry's collapse.

=====

September:

Unprecedented Summer Snowstorm Begins In The Alps

Italian Peaks Register Record-Breaking -24.6C (-12.3F)

Snow Clips The UK, Cold Threatens Records

Arctic Sea Ice Still Trend-less

Another New Study Finds Clouds To Be Earth's Climate Control Knob, Not CO2

Record-Breaking Snow For The Alps

Zululanders See Surprise Spring Flakes

Mount Washington Registers Early First Measurable Snow

Early-Season Snow In Austria

Scotland Shivers

Historic Lows Broken In U.S.

Greenland's Surface Gained 370 Billion Tons Of Ice Last Season, Bang On Average

Cold Records Tumble Across The East

Colder-Than-Average Augusts

India Meteorological Department Warns Of Harsh Winter To Come

Snowy Colorado

Southern Hemisphere Snow - Argentina and Chile Pounded

Early Snows Hit Kyrgyzstan

Eastern U.S. Fells Cold Records, 150 Million To See Fall-Like Temps

UK's Coolest Summer Since 2015

First Significant Snows Forecast For The Alps

150 Years Of Antarctic Ice Data Reveals Decline In Wildfires Since 1920

Arizona Sees August Snow

Europe Forecast Stark Temperature Drop

Thousands Without Power In Tasmania As Cold And Snow Intensify

Foot Of Snow Closes Going-To-The-Sun Road