EV outlook #1 – Growth, policy and net zero
Growth confounds the critics: 43% despite COVID-19
The pandemic saw global car sales fall 14% in 2020, yet EVs rebounded: sales of 3.2m were up 43% y-o-y versus 3% in 2019. Growth was particularly rapid in Europe (137%) driven by tighter fleet-wide emissions standards and a resurgence in plug-in hybrids (PHEVs). Rapid growth here and in China has continued in 2021.The primary role played by policy
Europe, China and California accounted for 52% of the total car market in 2020 but 87% of EV sales. A combination of consumer incentives (subsidies and lower taxes) and fleet-wide emission regulation of carmakers has encouraged adoption. In these regions the EV penetration rate of new sales (including PHEVs) is already in (or close to) double digits. Across the rest of the world it stands at just c 1%.Policy support may strengthen
Biden’s American Jobs Plan intends to allocate $174bn to close the gap with China on EVs in the US and includes spending on consumer incentives and charging infrastructure. Re-imposing tighter fuel economy standards could also accelerate the transition. China itself is targeting 20% EV penetration of new car sales by 2025. In Europe a further tightening of fleet-wide emissions (backed by fines) in 2030 is likely to spur adoption, even as incentives reduce. The bigger picture is the shift to net zero. In H220, the UK, Japan and California (markets accounting for c 10% of global car sales) announced the intention to phase out sales of fossil fuel cars by 2035, bringing transport policy in line with their broader net zero climate objectives. We expect other countries with net zero policies to set phase out dates and, around the upcoming COP26 summit in November 2021 in particular, for more countries to set net zero ambitions.EV market forecasts likely to rise
In 2020 EV growth rates returned to their 2011-20 average of 45%. This CAGR has remained consistent over the last decade (despite wide annual fluctuations) and is well above that implied by IEA and BNEF 2030 forecasts (20% and 23% respectively). Policy support, which has underpinned this growth so far, looks set to continue and may even strengthen. IEA and BNEF forecasts look likely to rise in our view. The key questions are about demand and whether supply can scale up as the absolute numbers rise. We are comfortable with our estimate of 36m EV sales in 2030 for now (a 27% CAGR) but will review our forecasts in more detail as we update our assessment of demand, technology and the supply chain.Subscribe to receiver related research
2020 and 2021 (so far): EVs confound the critics and COVID-19
As the spread of COVID-19 began affecting car sales early last year, many analysts assumed total EVs (pure EVs plus PHEVs) would struggle to grow much (if at all) in 2020. However, trends improved steadily through the year and, fuelled by a resurgence in Europe and China in H2, ultimately 3.2m EVs were sold worldwide, 43% y-o-y growth (Exhibit 1). This impressive performance was despite negligible EV growth outside these regions and a fall in overall car market sales of 14%. The weak overall car market coupled with EV growth saw penetration rise from 2.5% to 4.2% (Exhibit 2). Growth in pure EVs was 33% but PHEV growth accelerated to 71%, driven by growth in Europe. PHEVs accounted for 31% of total EVs. Exhibit 1: Total EV* sales by region in 2019 and 2020
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Existing policies should spur EV adoption in Europe and China
Policy is likely to remain a key growth driver in our view. Falling costs are set to reduce the need for direct demand incentives (subsidies) but policies already in place on the supply side in Europe and China (18% and 32% of the total car market respectively) look set to sustain rising adoption. The resurgence of European EV sales in 2020 highlights the effectiveness of the EU’s fleet-wide average emission regulations. The average emission intensity of new cars sold across the EU by each manufacturer is 95 gCO2/km in 2021 (compared to the 2015 target of 130 gCO2/km) and current regulations target that to fall 15% by 2025 and 37% by 2030. Increasing the mix of EVs is likely to be the most effective and cost-efficient way for carmakers to meet these targets. China’s fleet-wide emission standards have largely mirrored those in Europe. It is targeting fuel consumption of 4l per 100km by 2025, a 25% reduction from 2019 levels and equivalent to 93g CO2/km. In addition it has committed to achieving a 20% penetration of EVs by 2025, implying sales of at least 5m and a 30% CAGR over the next five years.
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Where could policy strengthen?
Greater policy support looks likely in the US and could have a big impact on global EV growth. The US accounted for 18% of car sales in 2020 but EV penetration (excluding California) was just 1.6%. Biden’s recently proposed $2trn jobs plan aims to allocate $174bn (9%) over eight years explicitly to ‘win the EV market’. It aims to provide point of sale and tax rebates to incentivise consumers to buy US-made EVs, grants and other incentives to local government to build a network of 500,000 chargers and begin electrifying the federal fleet. Additional policy measures could support this transition. Although it is unlikely the US will set a phase-out date, it may choose to strengthen its fuel-economy legislation. Reinstating the 54mpg (4.4 litres per 100km or c 102g CO2e/km) by 2025 fuel economy standard for new vehicles, lowered to 40mpg (5.9 litres per 100km or c 137g CO2e/km) by Trump, would help. While it would still be behind both the EU and China, it would imply accelerating the average annual increase in fuel economy from 2.4% currently to c.5% – a pace of efficiency gain that can only be met by increasing the mix of EV sales. As with the infrastructure plan, it is not a certainty that these proposals make it into legislation. The EU could strengthen its fleet targets further. Existing 2025 and 2030 fleet-wide emission targets may need to be made even more stringent to comply with the pending European Climate Law. Most large EU countries (France, Germany, Italy and Spain) have yet to set phase-out targets consistent with net zero. At the same time, it is likely that the level of subsidies will continue to fall. This can have a big impact on a market in an individual year, as the flatlining of China’s EV sales in 2019 highlights. However, assuming reductions in battery costs continue, we believe that any reduction in subsidies is unlikely to have a dramatic impact on the long-term growth trajectory. South Korea, 2% of the car market, has also made a national net zero pledge and may follow Japan by strengthening its existing (33% battery EV by 2030 target). We expect more countries to make commitments at or around COP26, scheduled for November 2021. As the market develops, the focus of policy support is also likely to shift. With EV costs likely to reach parity with ICEs by 2025 (see Battery charge: The rise of lithium-ion – options and implications), the need to incentivise EV sales will reduce. To sustain EV growth, attention will need to shift towards providing the charging infrastructure. For households without access to off-street parking, charging remains a challenge. The additional demand on the grid is likely to require investment in both distribution and generation capacity. Significantly, carmakers anticipating both the direction of travel of policy and technological progress are beginning to set their own voluntary targets. In January 2021 General Motors, a company with a 7% share of the global passenger car market, announced it would stop selling all fossil fuel powered ‘light-duty vehicles’ including hybrids by 2035. It joins a growing list of automakers promising to end ICE sales including Ford (in Europe by 2030), Volvo (2030) and Jaguar Landrover (2036).
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