Electric car revolution is on track, International Energy Agency says

Global electric vehicle sales are set to rise by more than a fifth to reach 17 million this year, powered by drivers in China, according to the International Energy Agency.

In a report Tuesday (local time), the IEA projected that "surging demand" for EVs over the next decade was set "to remake the global auto industry and significantly reduce oil consumption for road transport".

It expects half of all cars sold globally to be electric by 2035, up from more than one in five this year, provided charging infrastructure keeps pace. The IEA includes battery electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid vehicles in its definition of EVs.

The agency's bullish long-term outlook for EVs - based on current government policies - comes just days after the world's biggest battery EV maker Tesla slashed its prices in major markets to counter declining sales and growing competition from Chinese upstarts and established carmakers.

Recent negative headlines about slowing EV penetration are out of step with positive global trends, according to IEA executive director Fatih Birol. The data "does not at all show a reverse of the growth of electric cars. It shows an extremely robust increase of global electric car sales", he told reporters Tuesday.

The growth is not driven just by Chinese buyers. The number of new battery electric cars sold in the European Union rose almost four percent in the first quarter of this year compared with the same period in 2023, according to the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association.

In a statement, Birol said: "Rather than tapering off, the global EV revolution appears to be gearing up for a new phase of growth."

Despite the upbeat trends, EV makers are grappling with slim profit margins, squeezed by price wars as competition heats.

In the past few days, Tesla and Chinese EV maker Li Auto have cut prices on major models in China, the world's biggest EV market, with Tesla also cutting prices in Germany and the United States.

Earlier this month, Tesla posted its first annual drop in sales in nearly four years. The company's stock has plunged more than 40 percent so far this year. China's BYD has also stumbled after it briefly surpassed Tesla as global market leader, with its sales falling to about 300,000 in the first quarter from more than 525,000 in the final three months of 2023.

Automakers may be hurting from the price cuts but they will be crucial to increasing the take-up of EVs around the world, according to the IEA, which emphasised that the "pace of the transition to EVs... will hinge on affordability".

In China, more than 60 percent of EVs sold last year were less expensive than conventional cars, but in Europe and the United States the purchase price for new cars with internal combustion engines remains lower on average.

"Intensifying market competition and improving battery technologies are expected to reduce (EV) prices in the coming years," the IEA said.

"Growing electric car exports from Chinese automakers, which accounted for more than half of all electric car sales in 2023, could add to downward pressure on purchase prices," it added.

Last year, Chinese carmakers accounted for more than half of global electric car sales, compared with their 10 percent share of the conventional car market. "China is the de facto leader of electric car manufacturing around the world," Birol said.

Concerns about soaring imports of Chinese EVs prompted the European Union to open an investigation late last year into China's state support for EV makers. The auto industry is a major employer in Europe and crucial to the region's biggest economy, Germany, which is home to Volkswagen, Audi and BMW.

EV sales in China will account for almost 60 percent of the global total this year and about 45 percent of all car sales in the country.

By 2030, almost one in three cars on the roads in China is set to be electric, up from fewer than one in 10 last year, according to the IEA. That compares with its forecast for 17 percent in the United States and 18 percent in the European Union, compared with just over two percent and almost four percent respectively last year.

"This shift will have major ramifications for both the auto industry and the energy sector," Birol said. The IEA sees global oil demand peaking in 2030, helped by the electrification of the transport sector.

In addition to affordability, another barrier to mass adoption of electric cars is a lack of public charging infrastructure in Europe and the United States.

Under current government policies, the number of public EV charging points worldwide is expected to reach 15 million by the end of the decade, a near-fourfold increase from last year, according to the IEA.

CNN