Battery electric vehicles accounted for more than half of all cars sold in Norway last year, putting the country way out in front in efforts to kill off the internal combustion engine. And Tesla (TSLA) lost its sales crown to the Volkswagen Group.
Norway
is using huge tax incentives to help ensure that every new passenger
car and van sold in the country by the end of 2025 is a zero-emission
vehicle. Record electric vehicle sales in 2020 means the country is now
ahead of schedule, according to Oyvind Solberg Thorsen, CEO of the
Norwegian Road Federation (OFV).
The
market share of electric cars in Norway increased to 54% in 2020 from
42% the previous year, according to data published by OFV on Tuesday.
When hybrid vehicles are included, the share of electrified vehicles hit
83% last year.
Petrol and diesel cars, which had a combined market share of 71% in 2015, now have just 17%.
Norway
is the global leader in pushing polluting vehicles off the roads, and
it appears to be gaining momentum, with battery electric vehicles
accounting for two thirds of all sales during the month of December.
Other countries are playing catch up. The United Kingdom said in
November that it would ban the sale of new cars that run only on fossil
fuels in 2030, five years earlier than previously planned.
Carmakers have sought to use Norway as a testing ground for their electric ambitions. Volkswagen's (VLKAF) luxury brand Audi was the market leader in 2020, according to OFV, selling 9,227 of its e-tron vehicles in the country. Tesla's (TSLA) Model 3, the 2019 leader, was pushed into second place with 7,770 sales. Volkswagen's ID.3 ranked third with 7,754 cars sold.
Norway, which is the largest crude oil
producer in western Europe, has been using tax breaks to increase sales
of electric cars for decades. Oil revenue helped build the country's
$1.3 trillion sovereign wealth fund, which is now embracing renewable
energy and dumping oil and gas stocks.
The
incentives make most electric vehicle models cheaper to buy than
similar petrol models, according to the Norwegian Electric Vehicle
Association. Buyers enjoy other incentives including use of bus lanes,
and reduced fees on state ferries and toll roads.
The country has 10,000 publicly available charging points, according to the Norwegian Electric Vehicle Association.
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