Home »
Battery Electric Car »
GM Volt »
Hybrid »
Nissan »
Oil »
Oil price rise helps spur Europe electric car sales
Monday, March 21, 2016
A sharp rise in fuel prices this year is likely to lead more Europeans to buy electric cars, even though they are more expensive than conventional vehicles, auto executives said.
Brent crude oil prices have risen by more than 15 per cent so far this year to over US$124 a barrel, reaching over US$128 at the start of March.
"Electric cars cost typically around a fifth (depending on the market) to fuel when compared with conventional petrol or diesel cars," Olivier Paturet, head of Nissan's Zero Emission business unit in Europe, said.
"Increased costs at the forecourt give consumers yet an additional reason to look for alternatives," he added.
In the European Union, rising crude prices have less of a percentage impact on the overall retail cost of fuel than in Japan or the United States, because EU taxes on energy are much higher.
Still, in the UK average pump prices are up more than 20 per cent from two years ago.
Opel has received some 7,000 orders for its Ampera electric vehicle on launch. New UK registrations for pure electric cars, meanwhile, surged nearly 700 per cent to more than 1,082 vehicles in 2011 versus the previous year, according to figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).
"There is certainly momentum showing that those registrations are increasing," said SMMT spokesman Jonathan Visscher, who cited rising fuel costs as part of the reason.
"The cost of fuel is something that is on every motorist's mind, and finding ways to minimise the impact from fuel prices is something that every motorist is keen to do," he said.
Globally, new electric car registrations still account for no more than 1 per cent of the auto market.
Nissan, which sold around 20,000 electric cars globally last year, reckons that by 2020 electric vehicles could account for 10 per cent of all cars sold. Former executive chairman of Toyota Australia John Conomos says projections from economists suggest the world should move to 30 per cent of the fleet being EV by 2020.
Oil price rise helps spur Europe electric car sales
Posted by
Top Car News
at
6:32 PM
A sharp rise in fuel prices this year is likely to lead more Europeans to buy electric cars, even though they are more expensive than conventional vehicles, auto executives said.
Brent crude oil prices have risen by more than 15 per cent so far this year to over US$124 a barrel, reaching over US$128 at the start of March.
"Electric cars cost typically around a fifth (depending on the market) to fuel when compared with conventional petrol or diesel cars," Olivier Paturet, head of Nissan's Zero Emission business unit in Europe, said.
"Increased costs at the forecourt give consumers yet an additional reason to look for alternatives," he added.
In the European Union, rising crude prices have less of a percentage impact on the overall retail cost of fuel than in Japan or the United States, because EU taxes on energy are much higher.
Still, in the UK average pump prices are up more than 20 per cent from two years ago.
Opel has received some 7,000 orders for its Ampera electric vehicle on launch. New UK registrations for pure electric cars, meanwhile, surged nearly 700 per cent to more than 1,082 vehicles in 2011 versus the previous year, according to figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).
"There is certainly momentum showing that those registrations are increasing," said SMMT spokesman Jonathan Visscher, who cited rising fuel costs as part of the reason.
"The cost of fuel is something that is on every motorist's mind, and finding ways to minimise the impact from fuel prices is something that every motorist is keen to do," he said.
Globally, new electric car registrations still account for no more than 1 per cent of the auto market.
Nissan, which sold around 20,000 electric cars globally last year, reckons that by 2020 electric vehicles could account for 10 per cent of all cars sold. Former executive chairman of Toyota Australia John Conomos says projections from economists suggest the world should move to 30 per cent of the fleet being EV by 2020.
Tags :
Battery Electric Car,
GM Volt,
Hybrid,
Nissan,
Oil
Related : Oil price rise helps spur Europe electric car sales
Next Gen Lancer Evolution Hybrid to get different nameThis makes sense. Because the next generation Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution performance car is so different from the Evolution models that came before it, the Japanese aut ...
Nissan and 4R Energy Develop new Solar EV Charging SystemNissan and 4R Energy Corporation today announced that the two companies have developed a charging system for electric vehicles that combines a solar power generation sys ...
Raleigh NC First City to Test Wireless Electric Vehicle Charging SystemThe City of Raleigh announced today its involvement in the Apollo Program, a nationwide initiative aimed at encouraging the adoption of electric vehicles through the use ...
Trophée Andros Electrique 2012 - 2013 Val Thorens Race #1 [VIDEO]The annual Andros Trophee Ice Racing season in the French Alps is underway with the EV class back for their third year. Each Andros Car, built by Exagon engineering, is ...
Nissan Test Autonomous Leaf on Expressways in Japan [VIDEO]Nissan has carried out the first public road test of Autonomous Drive on a Japanese highway. A Nissan LEAF electric vehicle equipped with the revolutionary technology to ...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment