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BackUK Government May Lower Electric Vehicle Sales Target
UK Government May Lower Electric Vehicle Sales Target
En développement
BBC Business14.06.2026Politique3 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

UK Government May Lower Electric Vehicle Sales Target

L'essentiel

  • The UK government is considering reducing the 2030 target for electric vehicle sales from 80% to between 50% and 70%.
  • Car makers and unions cite cost and job concerns, while sustainability groups warn of climate goal impacts.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

The UK government is considering lowering its 2030 target for electric vehicle sales, a move supported by the automotive industry but opposed by sustainability groups. This comes after previous shifts in the ban on petrol and diesel car sales.

Taille de police

The UK government is set to water down its target for how many new cars that are sold need to be electric vehicles (EVs).

Under the current rules, 80% of all new cars sold in the UK need to be EVs by 2030, but car makers and trade unions have been lobbying government for years to reduce the target because of concerns costs and jobs.

Meanwhile, sustainability groups say any weakening of the target will threaten the UK's long-term electrification and climate goals.

The government will hold a consultation on what the new 2030 target should be, meaning it could take months before it is decided, but numbers ranging from 50% to 70% are under consideration.

A ban on sale of new petrol and diesel vehicles by 2030 was first announced by former prime minister Boris Johnson in 2020 and pushed back to 2035 by Rishi Sunak when he was prime minister.

Alongside this change, Sunak introduced phased targets for EV sales in the UK, known as the Zero Emission Vehicles (ZEV) mandate.

Under the ZEV mandate, the percentage of new car sales that need to be EVs increases each year. The target was 28% for 2025, 33% for 2026, and so on until it reaches 80% by 2030.

Labour has pledged in its manifesto to bring the petrol and diesel ban back to 2030. Meanwhile, a policy review on the separate ZEV mandate had been expected early next year but the industry has pushed for it to happen sooner.

Downing Street is expected to meet with the UK car industry this week to discuss the shift in policy. Labour has previously accused the Conservative government of "moving goalposts on phase out dates".

Companies that fail to hit the ZEV mandate face a fine of £15,000 per car. They also have the option of buying credits from rivals who have sold more electric cars than they needed to.

It is understood there are no plans to change that element of the mandate.

To sell their quota of EVs, many car makers use discounts. This has cost the industry more than £10bn over the past two years, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).

The SMMT told the BBC that "unless there is urgent relief of the mandate, which is still running well ahead of demand and about to ramp up, then the cost will be in jobs, investments and the viability of some businesses".

Unite union general secretary Sharon Graham said failure to act on the mandate would be "an act of self-harm to a sector which is a jewel in the crown of UK manufacturing".

Industry sources say drivers are reluctant to buy EVs because of worries about their range and the lack of EV charging points. They say this has also contributed to EVs failing to hold their value when they are sold second hand.

However, the UK Sustainable Investment and Finance Association's (UKSIF) chief executive James Alexander said that watering down the ZEV mandate could slow the rollout of more charging points.

He said the mandate is "vital for driving investment into our charging infrastructure" as it has "given the market confidence to commit vast sums of private capital to building out these networks across the country".

"Any attempt to water down these targets could send warning signals to these investors about the government's long-term commitment to electrifying our transport network," he added.

According to poll by researchers More in Common commissioned by UKSIF, 74% of Britons want their council to maintain or increase support for the rollout of EV charging points.

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • Government will announce a revised ZEV mandate target after consultation.

    Très probable · En quelques mois

Questions ouvertes

  • What will the final ZEV mandate target be?
  • What is the timeline for the consultation?
  • Will fines for non-compliance remain?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by BBC Business.

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