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EVs could soon be cheaper to make than fossil fuel vehicles

#1562 of 2543 articles from the Special Report: Race Against Climate Change
Tighter emissions regulations could put electric vehicles in a position to dominate all new car sales by the middle of the next decade, research by BloombergNEF has found. Photo by Ivan Radic / Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

This story was originally published by The Guardian and appears here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration

Electric cars and vans will be cheaper to produce than conventional, fossil fuel-powered vehicles by 2027, and tighter emissions regulations could put them in pole position to dominate all new car sales by the middle of the next decade, research has found.

By 2026, larger vehicles such as electric sedans and SUVs will be as cheap to produce as petrol and diesel models, according to forecasts from BloombergNEF, with small cars reaching the threshold the following year.

Electric vehicles reaching price parity with the internal combustion engine is seen as a key milestone in the world’s transition from burning fossil fuels.

The falling cost of producing batteries for electric vehicles, combined with dedicated production lines in carmarkers’ plants, will make them cheaper to buy, on average, within the next six years than conventional cars, even before any government subsidies, BloombergNEF found.

Electric cars and vans will be cheaper to produce than conventional, fossil fuel-powered vehicles by 2027, new research shows. #ElectricVehicles

The current average pre-tax retail price of a medium-sized electric car is €33,300 (C$48,930), compared with €18,600 (C$27,330) for a petrol car, according to the research. In 2026, both are forecast to cost about €19,000 (C$27,915).

By 2030, the same electric car is forecast to cost €16,300 (C$23,948) before tax, while the petrol car would cost €19,900 (C$29,238).

The report’s timeline for cost parity is more conservative than other forecasts, including one from the investment bank UBS, which has predicted that electric cars will cost the same to make by 2024.

However, forecasters are in agreement that the cost of new batteries will continue to fall in the coming years.

The new study, commissioned by Transport & Environment, a Brussels-based non-profit organization that campaigns for cleaner transport in Europe, predicts new battery prices will fall by 58 per cent between 2020 and 2030 to US$58 per kilowatt-hour.

A reduction in battery costs to below $100 per kWh is viewed as an important step towards greater take-up of fully electric vehicles, and would largely remove the financial appeal of hybrid electric vehicles, which combine a battery with a conventional engine.

Electric vehicle sales boomed in 2020, especially in the EU and China, but environmental campaigners are calling on governments to introduce tougher emissions regulations to encourage more consumers to make the switch.

The U.K. government plans to ban the sale of new fossil fuel vehicles from 2030, while European companies have called on the EU to set 2035 as the end date for selling new combustion engine vehicles in the bloc.

Julia Poliscanova, T&E’s senior director for vehicles and emobility, said stricter CO2 targets were needed to accelerate the switch to electric.

“With the right policies, battery electric cars and vans can reach 100 per cent of sales by 2035 in western, southern and even eastern Europe. The EU can set an end date in 2035 in the certainty that the market is ready. New polluting vehicles shouldn’t be sold for any longer than necessary,” she said.

The high cost of batteries, accounting for between a quarter and two-fifths of the cost of an electric vehicle, has previously led to reluctance among the world’s biggest carmakers to switch production away from their profitable fossil fuel models.

Reduced cost is seen as critical to make electric vehicles more attractive to consumers, especially when combined with increased range — the distance a vehicle can travel before it requires charging, and an improved charging network.

“Once you are well over 200 miles per range, and you’ve got a really good charging infrastructure, it becomes a no-brainer. We’ve seen that in Norway,” said David Bailey, a professor of business economics at the University of Birmingham.

However, he believes the U.K. government needs to improve the charging network: “We are lagging behind some other north European nations, and we certainly need a much more rapid rollout of the charging infrastructure, at home, on-street and fast.”

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