I’ll be buying a brand new petrol car just before the 2030 ban: Matt Ridley
By Paul Homewood

The rush to electric vehicles risks killing our car industry, shackling us to China and bumping up our taxes to reduce global emissions by just 0.044%. That’s why I’ll be buying a brand new petrol car just before the 2030 ban
Daily Mail, 8 July 2023
By MATT RIDLEY
Britain’s electric vehicle transition and the ban on petrol car sales from 2030 are a slow-motion car crash. The technology is not ready, the cost will be vast, the logistics are forbidding, the reliance on China is worrying and the backlash from the public is likely to be harsh.
Worst of all, the benefits are derisory at best and may not even exist.
Yes, you read that right. It is possible that we could replace all of Britain’s cars and vans with electric vehicles and still find that carbon dioxide emissions are higher, not lower. Cost-benefit, hello?
First, though, consider the politics. Most electric-car batteries are being made in China and its hold on the market is growing thanks to huge investment in lithium and other minerals, low labour costs and a cheap, coal-fired grid. Chinese company BYD overtook Tesla as the biggest manufacturer of electric vehicles last year and, in a truly sinister development, has just agreed with Tesla to jointly promote ‘core socialist values’ while dominating the market and apparently fixing prices.
Switching transport to electric in a short timescale will inevitably mean buying Chinese. Are we really about to force ourselves to become even more reliant on a totalitarian regime that stamps out freedom in Hong Kong, commits genocide against the Uighurs, threatens war on Taiwan and refuses to be transparent about how a pandemic began near its leading virus laboratory?
To wean ourselves off China over the next seven years would require 100 times as much battery capacity as we have now, which is neither affordable nor feasible. To lure battery-makers to the UK, despite our sky-high energy prices (caused by the massive investment in wind power and the refusal to tap shale gas), the Government is having to throw armfuls of taxpayers’ money at battery and car manufacturers.
Britishvolt failed to build its ‘Gigafactory’ in Blyth for lack of taxpayer subsidies.
Lord (Zac) Goldsmith thinks we are falling behind in the race to subsidise ‘green’ energy. Yet handouts rarely make industries competitive. If America and the European Union want to spend a fortune trying — and probably failing — to catch up with the Chinese, why should we join in?
But don’t expect industry bosses to tell you the truth about the impossibility of this transition. Huge taxpayer subsidies to force consumers to switch products are just what they love, whether the plan makes sense or not.
To paraphrase Gulliver’s Travels, if you asked Rolls-Royce or Tata to devise a plan to make sunbeams from cucumbers, they would have a jolly good crack at it — and only tell you it was impossible after spending a couple of billion pounds of your money.
This raises the question: why are we doing this again? We’re deliberately killing a profitable British car industry for minimal benefit to please a few posh activists and crony capitalists.
There is no sign of ordinary people demanding this transition. Electric cars still cost almost double their petrol equivalent.
So, just as producers need taxpayer subsidies to supply electric cars, consumers need subsidies to buy them. An industry dependent on taxpayer support at both ends of the chain is not sustainable.
Nor can Britain’s electricity infrastructure be adapted easily or quickly to cope with the extra demand implied by the transition — without further subsidies.
Just to supply the extra electricity for a fully electric fleet would mean a near-doubling of the number of wind farms (plus necessary gas-fired back-up), or an equivalent new supply from nuclear, a technology that takes decades to build.
Then there’s the practicality of distributing that energy. On our current grid, people are struggling to get fast chargers installed at home because of lack of capacity in the wires and transformers. That will only get worse as that capacity is taken up with demand from heat pumps.
So, unless the Government throws yet more money at upgrading the network, after 2030 we will be faced with five-hour recharge times, compared with five-minute petrol or diesel refuels today.
As Andrew Montford of Net Zero Watch argues, upgrading the distribution grid on these timescales is impossible, so meeting the target will mean many people will be forced to forgo a car entirely.
These are practical reasons why the transition cannot and won’t happen. But would it even help if it did? Let’s do a simple sum. Suppose the UK does manage to shift all cars and vans to electric in the 2030s, banning petrol and diesel cars as it does so. Cars and vans generate about 70 per cent of transport emissions and transport is 25 per cent of all emissions.
Meanwhile, an optimistic estimate of the emissions savings of electric cars over petrol or diesel is 25 per cent per vehicle and the UK generates 1 per cent of worldwide emissions, then that means we will have reduced global emissions of carbon dioxide by — wait for it — [0.7 x 0.25 x 0.25 x 0.01 = 0.0004375 or] 0.044 per cent.
Less than one half of one tenth of one per cent. You would probably have more effect on the climate if you dropped a couple of ice cubes in the Thames once a week.
And that’s the best we can hope for. In reality the effect will be even smaller. The notion that switching from petrol to electric saves 25 per cent of emissions is, as I say, optimistic, perhaps wildly so. In fact, the number may actually be negative.
Here’s why. First, it requires a lot more carbon dioxide emissions in a lot of extractive industries to make an electric car than a petrol car. This is especially true for the battery.
As Mark Mills, an energy expert with the Manhattan Institute, explained in a recent article: ‘To match the energy stored in one pound of crude oil [from which petrol and diesel are produced] requires 15 pounds of lithium battery, which entails digging up about 7,000 pounds of rock and dirt to get the minerals needed — lithium, graphite, copper, nickel, aluminium, zinc, neodymium, manganese and so on.
‘Thus, fabricating a typical single half-ton EV battery requires mining and processing about 250 tons of materials.’
That requires a lot of diesel and electricity.
So there’s a huge up-front emissions disadvantage before an electric car even takes to the road. As Professor of Engineering Science at Oxford University Gautam Kalghatgi calculates, an electric car with a 60 kWh battery will start with a deficit of 7.5 tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent emissions, before it has driven a single mile.
Even when running, an electric vehicle is not ‘zero-emission’ because Britain’s electric grid is powered by gas (which emits some carbon dioxide) and wind turbines (whose manufacture requires a lot of coal and which get replaced every 20 or 30 years). Even nuclear has a carbon footprint (all that concrete and steel), though it’s much the smallest.
Take all that into account and you can calculate how many miles an electric car has to drive before it has ‘broken even’ with a petrol car on emissions.
Many estimates of this number are not worth the paper they are written on, because they make absurdly unrealistic assumptions about the size of battery needed, the scale of the up-front emissions and other factors.
But some are a bit better. Volkswagen compared a diesel Golf with an electric Golf and estimated that the electric car has to be driven 80,000 miles before its emissions are lower than the diesel car in a typical European country.
In Germany, where the grid still depends partly on coal, it’s more like 125,000 miles. In China, you would never reach break even and electric cars might as well be called coal cars. This emperor has no clothes.

The break-even mileage is even higher for larger batteries in bigger cars, but lower for a comparison with petrol. Volvo compared its electric car with a petrol equivalent and concluded that the break-even came at 50,000 miles in a typical European country, though the emissions savings are still just 15 per cent after 120,000 miles.
So the average driver would take 12 years to reach the point where he is saving 15 per cent of his emissions.
But the batteries are designed to last about 100,000 miles. So just when the emissions savings come into sight, you will be scrapping the car or paying an exorbitant sum to replace its battery — long before you get to 25 per cent emissions savings.
Either way, you will reset the clock on emissions and for the next five years your emissions will again be higher than if you had stuck to petrol. If you swap cars every five years, you would never see any savings.
Yet even these numbers are probably too optimistic. The energy cost of refining ores into metals for the manufacture of batteries is going up, not down.
As the ore quality declines over time, especially in the case of copper, so the up-front emissions of battery manufacture are getting worse and the break-even mileage longer.
Nor have we thought this through from the consumer’s point of view. A petrol or diesel car with 60,000 miles on the clock has some second-hand value. An electric car approaching the end of its battery life is going to be worth nothing. So people will probably trade them in a lot earlier. But second-hand buyers of electric cars will not get the up-front subsidy.
Indeed second-hand electric vehicles are already starting to flood on to the market at cheap prices, some of them from disillusioned buyers perhaps contemplating the ruins of their marriages after rows over flat batteries while trying to find a working charge point on the way to a family wedding.
Living 300 miles from London, I am already familiar with southern friends panicking about where to charge their cars en route.
If you think we need to go electric to improve urban air quality, think again.
The latest studies suggest that internal combustion engines are continuing to get cleaner at a rapid rate and that electric cars, with their extra weight, may soon be contributing more particulate pollution from the wear on their tyres than comes out of the engines of petrol cars, according to Professor Kalghatgi.
Last week Toyota claimed that solid-state batteries would start transforming the electric-car market from 2027.
Yet not only is this a delay of two years on previous promises, we have heard that before: the solid-state battery has been five years away for 15 years, with even Sir James Dyson losing patience with it. Even then, making it affordable and reliable will not be easy.
But if Toyota is right, it is all the more reason to delay the UK’s target lest we dash into a premature technology and find it’s obsolete.
Yet governments have form for prematurely championing technologies for ideological reasons. Back in 2007 Tony Blair’s government announced that Britain would choose a unilaterally fast path to banning incandescent light bulbs in favour of compact fluorescent ones, with the aim of helping ‘tackle climate change’.
This gave Philips and other manufacturers a rich reward on their lobbying, but made all our lives worse. The new bulbs were costly, slow to light up, made us look ill, had a much shorter lifetime than expected and were dangerous to dispose of.
Worst of all, the enforced switch to an inferior technology probably delayed the arrival of the LED, which soon proved far cheaper to buy and run as well as working much better and lasting for ages. Consumers needed no subsidy or compulsion to buy LEDs.
Yet the £3 billion switch to fluorescent light bulbs is peanuts compared with the cost of banning the sale of petrol and diesel cars and vans by 2030.
Just as I hoarded incandescent bulbs in 2009, so I will probably choose to buy a new petrol or diesel car just before the ban.
This time, I expect everybody else, especially up here in the North, will be doing the same, so don’t expect it to be cheap.
He may have a point. But, if I lived in of near any major city like London, I’d be very aware of what Councils and governments might have in store for me as a cash cow motorist.
So, the answer is not to buy a new car, but to buy a good pre 1970(?) ICE that is (currently) exempt from ULEZ zones.
VIVA CUBA EN ANGLETERRE!
40 years old (according to TFL website) so almost 1984! Wonder if that RR with the Merlin engine qualifies.
😀
Do you not think the current ULEZ regulations will be “updated” by 2030 or long before to create further disincentives to trying to get around their plan?
Yes. (Sigh)
The newer the car, the more sensors and controls that must be replaced to fix any issue, because they are not designed to be fixed.
Many newer cars are delivered late because they have trouble getting original parts to even put them together.
Many of the troublesome systems can be decluttered, i.e removed or bypassed. Ideally I would take a modern car back to the Cortina V specification. Using carb, coil and distributor the effects of EMP can also be mitigated.
Not legally they can’t, and it won’t pass the MOT.
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A few points on that article .
UK CO2 emissions from vehicles are about 25% of our total . Which is about 1% of all human emissions . Which is about 3% of all of the CO2 which only makes up 0.04% of the atmosphere .
So the UK vehicle total is 0.000001% of the atmosphere .
The charging will never work as [ even without heat pumps ] , for just 20% of vehicles to charge up at any time would need 100% increase in generation capacity , as well as the whole grid would need upgrading .
But it is still good that someone can get an article in the media which shows that EVs are impossible .
At a zoom call and Q&A with Shapps last week he replied to my question about who was going to pay for the £200bn required Grid infrastructure (thanks to Paul for the data) that it would be us. So the renewable investors avoid paying anything.
Dogma trumps logic.
I have a good diesel estate car which I have no intention of selling and if I can’t drive into a city centre then that city will do without my business.
Precisely. Born and bred in Bristol I now avoid the city centre and shopping area like the plague because of its LEZ. The eco-loonies have destroyed a once wonderful historic city. Well done mayor Marvin.
Up here in Caledonistan, the numpties in Glasgow have introduced one of those anti car zones.
A large number of the drones (not working from home employees) who own non compliant cars, have come up with a great solution – they hire skalectric cars.
Naturally being “essential” workers they also get a milage allowance.
More people need to do the same and boycott cities with anti-car policies. It will be hard for local businesses, but they should be the ones actively protesting already about the lost customers.
‘They’ are not bothered that it will never work. ‘Climate’ is a means to an end. We need to understand how to defeat that end.
A couple of years ago I complained to a Chinese supplier of lithium-ion batteries why they were below spec and I was told that this was what they “aspired to”. So when you see that 7 Chinese EVs per day catch fire, which they do, do not be surprised, you know the reason why.
“But if Toyota is right, it is all the more reason to delay the UK’s target lest we dash into a premature technology and find it’s obsolete.”
Think VHS vs Betamax. A lot of people thought Betamax was the better technology (I couldn’t comment) but that wasn’t enough to save it.
Ridley is correct in his assessment — as he so often is.
The lightbulb fiasco, the fluorescent lamps were much more expensive than the 3 for a penny filament bulbs and the light quality was horrid. Then eventually came along LED bulbs which have pleasing light quality. Of course they are immensely expensive and don’t last as long as promised, in all probability it costs the consumer more overall, and the environment too.
I bought my 2006 BMW Alpina D3 with the intention of keeping it forever. It has a gearstick, a handbrake and not much else and still looks and goes as well as when it was new. Surely the greenest way to run any car and I wonder how many battery cars will still be going strong in 17 years time?
Very nice, I have a 2013 Fiat Panda (minimum spec. £3,000 second hand) shared with my neighbour and driven jointly 2000 miles per year. Everything in Faversham is within walking distance. Pretty green I reckon.
Totally agree Mat Ridley.
But with respect may I point out that you missed one important cost which will be the penalty cost to dispose of the old batteries which are not now, nor likely to be, recyclable. That is probably going to be at least five thousand pounds at least.
Add to that the spontaneous fire risk of lithium batteries compounded in accidents in which water hoses cannot be used on the 400+ volts. Etc.
They may soon be banned on all ferries and in all tunnels. A truly heartbreaking incident involving agonising deaths is certain to come which will instantly destroy the EV market.
The final point you make is valid. Some six or so years ago at a social event I got chatting to retired Fire Officer. He said that the most impressive fire he had ever been to, which took a very long time to get under control, was a lithium battery storage facility for possible recycling. He said that it would take a major tragedy to get Government and the Fire Service to become properly prepared. Interestingly he said “just like the dangers of air bags in vehicles. We then realised that there are several explosive devices in every vehicle.” I believe a rescuer was seriously injured of not killed, by an unrestrained, still active air bag going off, when an injured driver was being attended to by a fire officer.
Anyone guess which way the price of ICE cars will go as the deadline approaches? Either they won’t be able to give them away, or the prices will rocket. Probably not wise to risk leaving it to the last minute.
Or they won’t even be available, as everyone will already have stopped making them for the UK market.
That would be a scenario that would cause high prices and grey imports, production will continue in other markets.
Of course if EVs become affordable and improve, there will be a glut of unsold ICE vehicles nobody wants cheap as chips.
Nobody can predict the future!
I have bad visions of piles of tired EVbatteries stacked up unrecycled, or buried under a thin film of soil, burning brightly,
Cannot be extinguished, toxic fumes and heat, chain reaction, explosions. Who would want these close to their home?
We have visions of the 700 MWh BESS on the edge of town going up. Equivalent to about 450 tons of TNT if/when it does, plus the toxic fumes of course.
https://www.favershameye.co.uk/post/project-fortress-previously-known-as-cleve-hill
If the numbers added up for EVs, there would already be heaps of them on the road. But they don’t, unless you’re rich, and they won’t add up for sometime yet, by which time the technology will have completely changed and EVs as we currently know them will be redundant and we will have dropped a bundle on that redundancy.
I’m not so sure it’s mainly the rich buying EVs. As in the ’80s, I suspect that the vast majority of them are company car purchases/leases. I wonder how many politicians are using them as their main means of transport?
One part left out of the ICE ban discussion is the role being played by the CCP’s most favored apparatchik, Elon Musk. Musk is a bought-and-paid-for CCP controlled asset, actively working to eviscerate the American Big Three auto makers via his unrelenting price cuts of his Tesla EVs. With all the Belt and Road financing behind Tesla, Musk will price cut these derivative domestic auto makers into bankruptcy. His plan has been very successful, as Ford and GM are losing cash faster than Biden can print it.
“But if Toyota is right, it is all the more reason to delay the UK’s target lest we dash into a premature technology and find it’s obsolete.”
Like when the government was pushing fluorescent light bulbs when high intensity LEDs were already being developed you mean.
Just like the “Seagull” as it swoops down out of the sky to steal the last chip from your Fish & Chip dinner as you sit on the seafront eating your hard earned supper, the Chinese are stealing your dinner from under you nose !!! …….. I had first hand knowledge of this over a year ago in the depths of the UK countryside. Down a small country road in West Sussex England and then down an even smaller farm lane I had taken my classic car to have an undercoating painted on its chassis. The chap just leaving the barn where this procedure was to take place was driving a Chinese made electric car ???………. The owner was very pleased with his purchase and was enthusiastic about its price and performance. It struck me at the time how the tendrils of Chinese manufacturing are found even in the oddest corners of the British countryside. I am pretty sure this man who was your average ” BRIT ” did not give a second thought to any wider consequences but was focused on saving the planet and getting a CHEAP electric car that suited his circumstance. My focus was to stop my old car from rusting away while it sits near the ocean waiting for me to use it twice a year !!!……… My point is that I was trying to preserve an early 1970’s classic and the guy I met in the English countryside had purchase a New World Vehicle. He thought he was on the right track but in my humble opinion he was on the WRONG TRACK entirely, his new purchase has already contributed a lot of emissions where my classics emissions were consigned to history. Back here in the USA I own a old Subaru which I bought new 2004, it has over 230,000 miles on it and has been a great car. Its emissions are way down the road and as a second family car it out performs any electric car by a wide margin….. Well happy motoring to all and enjoy your dinner while you still can !!!……. All the best from an English Man in an Arizona Pine Forrest.
I’m bubblewrappng a couple of Citroen Picasso diesels with AdBlu for my grandchildren. Shd last 100k miles and see the collapse of the policy. By the way has the cowardly government said they are banning imports? Haven’t seen anything? Must ask my MP.
Ban …. LOL. I rather looking forward to seeing politicians roasted by their disgruntled electorate.