Setbacks for EU rollout of electric vehicles put 2050 net zero goals at risk

Plan to ban petrol car sales by 2035 not credible given EV costs, charging structure and battery supplies, European Court of Auditors says

If we want a million electric cars on the road by 2030, how are we going to charge them all? Stock photograph
If we want a million electric cars on the road by 2030, how are we going to charge them all? Stock photograph

The European Union needs to rethink its policies to make a 2035 ban on new petrol car sales feasible as electric vehicles (EVs) remain unaffordable and alternative fuel options are not credible, the EU’s external auditor said, jeopardising its 2050 climate goals.

The 27-member bloc wants to achieve net zero emissions by 2050, meaning it will emit no more than it can balance out with measures to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere such as reforestation programmes.

It hopes to meet its targets with the widespread use of electric vehicles as road transport accounts for nearly a quarter of its emissions.

The EU wants to have at least 30 million zero-emission cars on European roads by 2030, or about 12 per cent of the current car fleet. However, the European Court of Auditors cautioned the bloc may create new economic dependencies and hurt its own industry.

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As it stands, high EV production costs in Europe means the bloc will have to rely on cheap imports, mainly from China, if it sticks to the 2035 goal. China accounts for 76 per cent of EV battery output compared with the EU that represents less than 10 per cent of production globally.

“The EU faces a conundrum, how to meet goals without harming industrial policy and hurting consumers,” Annemie Turtelboom, a European Court of Auditors member, told reporters. She added that 2026 will be a key year for a policy review.

Tesla is the leading EV maker in the United States and Europe but has come under pressure to slash prices due to competition from Chinese cars. Similarly, European carmakers like Stellantis that owns Peugeot and Fiat, and Renault are now racing to develop their own affordable EV models.

While EV purchases have been on the rise in the EU, the increase was largely due to subsidies. In addition, charging infrastructure is lacking with 70 per cent of charging points concentrated in just Germany, France and the Netherlands. The EU is falling short of its aim to set up one million charging stations across the bloc.

“[EV] prices would need to halve and subsidies do not seem to be a viable tool ... Batteries alone already costs €15,000 when produced in Europe,” Ms Turtelboom added when speaking to reporters.

Alternative fuels like biofuels, e-fuels or hydrogen remain uneconomic at commercial scale.

Adding to the difficulties in hitting its 2050 goal, the court said the EU has not cut real carbon dioxide emissions from cars despite new testing standards and measures such as Euro 6.

In a January report, the European Court of Auditors attributes this to the gap between laboratory tests and real world emission tests.

The Commission was relying on lab tests, which created a skewed version. In reality, average emissions from diesel cars are unchanged from 2010 at 170 grammes of carbon dioxide per kilometre while petrol cars are just down 4.6 per cent at over 160g carbon dioxide per kilometre.

“Despite lofty ambitions and strict requirements, most conventional cars still emit as much carbon dioxide as 12 years ago.” European Court of Auditors member Nikolaos Milionis said in a statement, attributing part of the failure to a rise in the average weight of cars. – Reuters