Perhaps 2019 could go down as the year when the transition to electric vehicles started to take shape in Australia.
Like the rooftop solar industry a decade earlier, sales of electric and hybrid vehicles remain low – but there is a definite trend here and every reason to believe that the uptake of EVs will be quicker over the next decade than even that of rooftop solar over the last 10 years.
Official data for calendar 2019 released by the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries tells what is becoming a familiar story: Sales of petrol and diesel cars are plunging, down 7.8 per cent from the previous year to the lowest level since 2011.
The story that goes with it is the same: the FCAI blames everything from slower wages growth, tight lending, exchange rate movements and even “the extreme environmental factors our country is experiencing.”
What it doesn’t highlight, but what is clear from its data, is the strength of the electric and hybrid markets, the only two sectors that have enjoyed substantial sales growth over the past year, a story that is likely to be repeated until fossil fuel vehicles becomes a rare offering in the new car market.
To read the full story on RenewEconomy’s electric vehicle dedicated site, The Driven, click here…
Australia's biggest operating wind farm has set a stunning new record, becoming the first in…
The passive battery is not a new phenomenon. What is new is that its value…
State-owned utility says it is in discussions to invest in non-lithium technologies with up to…
Batteries have been protecting consumers from price spikes in most states over summer. But they…
State Electricity Commission CEO Chris Miller on how the government-owned energy company is filling gaps…
Australia’s electricity prices ignore location, even though the grid doesn’t. This mismatch drives congestion, curtailment,…