Ford boss says it may restrict petrol models in the UK to hit EV targets
By Paul Homewood
h/t idau
I warned this would happen last year:
Ford could limit new petrol models in the UK to increase its share of electric vehicle sales and avoid significant fines on manufacturers from this year.
Martin Sander, general manager at Ford Model e Europe, said the restriction on new petrol car availability by the UK’s second most popular car brand would also be likely to push up prices for buyers.
It comes as car makers face a difficult task in meeting binding EV sale thresholds, which step up from 2024 to the scheduled all-out ban on sales of new petrol and diesel passenger cars in 2035.
The latest UK vehicle sales data published this week show that public demand for EVs has dwindled in recent months, with just one in six electric cars registered in April purchased by private buyers.
Speaking at the Financial Times Future of the Car Summit in London on Tuesday, Mr Sander also said Ford would be pushing back its plans to sell only EVs in Europe by 2030.
He said the target was now ‘irrelevant’ due to electric car sales being ‘below expectations’.
While Prime Minister Rishi Sunak took the decision last year to delay the ban on sales of new combustion-engined cars in the UK from 2030 to 2035, the Government’s Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) mandate has put pressure on manufacturers to up their share of EV sales.
Dubbed by minsters as ‘the world’s most ambitious regulatory framework for the transition to electric vehicles’, the mandate was officially enacted in January.
The law means 22 per cent of each mainstream brand’s car registrations in 2024 must be electric, scaling up to 28 per cent for next year and to 80 per cent by the end of the decade – before rising to 100 per cent from 2035.
Failure to meet the ZEV mandate sales targets can result in huge fines for auto makers of £15,000 per model sold below the required threshold.
After the first four months of 2024, it’s clear that many manufacturers are well behind the 22 per cent requirement for this year.
By the end of April, just 15.7 per cent of all UK registrations were EVs.
Mr Sander told the summit’s panel on Tuesday that Ford’s only option to avoid the fines was to divert sales of petrol cars to other countries.
While a number of car manufacturers have said that the ZEV mandate targets are challenging, Ford is the first to say it could restrict petrol model availability to force its EV sales share higher.
Mr Sander told the audience: ‘We can’t push EVs into the market against demand. We’re not going to pay penalties. We are not going to sell EVs at huge losses just to buy compliance.
‘The only alternative is to take our shipments of [combustion engine] vehicles to the UK down and sell these vehicles somewhere else.’
Last month, Carlos Tavares, chief executive at Stellantis, which is the parent group of Vauxhall, Citroen, Peugeot and other major automotive brands, said the UK’s ZEV mandate could see Stellantis slash the number of cars it sells in Britain, even refusing to rule out halting sales of some models altogether.
But a source close to the company said the more likely option was that sales would be restricted or prices would rise to compensate.
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I really cannot work out why so-called motoring experts, such as the prat who wrote this article, did not see this coming a long while ago!
To repeat yet again – NOBODY WANTS THESE USELESS ELECTRIC CARS THAT ARE TOTALLY UNFIT FOR PURPOSE.
The government’s Zero Emissions Vehicle mandate attempts to force motorists to buy something they don’t want.
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Meanwhile UK motor manufacturers, such as Ford and Vauxhall, obviously cannot afford to pay the fines demanded, nor sell EVs below cost price.
Their only solution is obvious – cut production of proper cars, in order to increase their ratio of EVs, while also increasing their price. This will have the double effect of improving the EV ratio, whilst raising some additional income with which to pay the fines.
And the poor British car buyer will pay the cost of higher prices and longer delivery times.
Meanwhile the toad, Mike Hawes, really should consider his position, which is to represent UK motor manufacturers and traders, whose interest he most certainly does not represent:
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Comments are closed.
I’m importing Citroen diesels for my grandchildren in order to defeat this insanity. I’ve asked my MP Flick Drummond when the government plans to ban ICE imports. No reply. I guess nobody’s got the guts.
We can’t be wishy washy on this. Even if you’re desperate don’t buy an EV just because you need one. And don’t buy an overpriced new petrol car either. Make do or buy something used (yes it will be expensive). The only tool we have is to convince the gov’t and auto makers it’s petrol at a reasonable price or nothing. We can hold out longer than the automakers can.
No problem, we still won’t buy your battery cars
One would have thought that the SMMT would have had serious meetings with Government before the “legally binding” targets and fines were introduced. Did they really agree that this was a good idea, or was it sprung upon them with no consultation
? I wonder if a FOI letter to Mark Harper would get an honest answer.
Green policies = restricting supply
and that causes prices rises
Big Oil is in with Big Green
and thus has had bumper profits from government policies that restricted the oil/gas markets, new exploration and storage
Restricting supplies of ICE vehicles = big prices, bigger profits
To be brutally honest, this is the only solution if the 22% and rising target is too be hit, and I believe that this was the ultimate plan at the outset as it will do one thing, due to scarcity, the price of ICE vehicles will rise as people pay a premium to get a vehicle they know will do the job- thus the gap between ICE and BEV closes………….
Ford and the other car makers can restrict petrol models all that they like. It will not make an ounce of difference because the car driving public do not want to drive electric cars. As further evidence (such as battery life/ cost of replacement and second hand resale price) the percentage sold to private buyers will drop.
Sir Jim Ratcliffe says Demand for electric cars has dried up. It’s time for a rethink (telegraph.co.uk). His Range Extender (REX) idea sounds daft.
And there’s more here: The electric car carnage has only just begun (telegraph.co.uk)
Obvioulsy the Ford boss is prpeared to see his business lose sales. Were I a share holder I would be selling mine!
I think they should have been sold a while ago as Ford is losing massive amounts of money on battery vehicles in the US.
Ford is losing a fortune on EVs in the States…
Ford’s electric vehicle unit reported that losses soared in the first quarter to $1.3 billion, or $132,000 for each of the 10,000 vehicles it sold in the first three months of the year, helping to drag down earnings for the company overall.
https://edition.cnn.com/2024/04/24/business/ford-earnings-ev-losses/index.html
How is a 100% EV plan going to work?
It isn’t, the whole scam will be canned soon
We’ve just bought a brand new petrol car (Subaru) which (in our ’70s) should see us out now. Only problem might be Government restrictions on petrol sales which I wouldn’t put past the (likely!) incoming government !!
Petrol & diesel will continue to be available – the elites are not going to drive inferior battery cars
“NOBODY WANTS THESE USELESS ELECTRIC CARS THAT ARE TOTALLY UNFIT FOR PURPOSE”
I think is too strong a statement, because clearly a few people do actually want to buy them, just nowhere near enough for the UK Gov. plans.
Perhaps not too strong as you may think. If BEVs were subject to taxation (rather than subsidy) at the level of ICE fuels/cars , I doubt many, if any, at all would want them.
At £1.60 per litre for diesel, it is actually only half that price excluding VAT and fuel duty. So 80p per litre for typically 13 miles (60mpg) from a family sized saloon is just over 6p per mile. To match that with a BEV doing about 3.6 miles per kWh you need a price of under 22p per kWh. That sort of price is never going to be sustainable whatever anyone tries to claim. and all this is before BIK and VED are considered.
If it came down to a level playing field for tax purposes, EVs would die overnight.
I agree about the future and level playing fields.
However at the moment you still have plenty of greedy people prepared to take advantage of other tax payer’s money with EVs, just like Solar and Heat Pumps.
Mostly fleet cars driven by BIK hoovers
Keep up with maintenance of your ‘fossil’-fuelled vehicle, and hang on to it as long as possible.
Just what the globalist elites will be doing, except in their new ICE cars
No plans to trade in my petrol car it is a 2010 plate – serviced every year – passes the MOT. It meets my needs sufficiently, gets me from A to B. Not interested and will never by an EV
Typo Buy an EV
But this works just as well as people buying EVs. The point is that there are no ICE cars. That such a policy makes us much poorer, well who cares? Imbeciles with Messiah complexes are saving the world.
That is exactly the point. It is all just religious fanaticism. Time for a cull – “praise the Lord and pass the ammo”.
I hope entrepreneurs are preparing to start businesses importing proper cars. This died out when currency rates made it not worth it but if supplies will be restricted from now on this would look like the ideal time to restart. And then it could also extend to importing used cars if the nupties in charge try to ban individual new car imports.
A surprisingly large proportion of the world drive on the left (despite what many people think.) I can imagine a future with cars built to export to say India doing a remarkably short round trip (on paper only) and ending up in the UK. My all time favourite car (for general road driving) was a Honda Civic Hybrid….. Japan drives on the left too!
There’s a reason China are flooding the West with cheap, low quality mobile crematoriums, yet not driving them themselves!
I have a 15 year old 3 litre Mercedes saloon. It goes like a train, does around 30 to the gallon and is worth about £2500 now. In 120000 miles it has needed routine services, tyres, new brake disks every 50000 miles and one set of front calipers. The only downside is that the Sat Nav maps are out of date Don’t be conned. Buy a reliable old quality car and relax