Hybrid and fully electric models reached a record market share of 10.2% last month, according to figures released today by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders.
More than 16,000 hybrid, plug-in hybrid or pure electric models were registered, with battery-electric vehicles registering a 228% rise over the same period last year. That’s despite the overall UK car market shrinking by 1.3% year-on-year.
Mild-hybrid vehicles, said not to be included under the ‘alternatively fuelled vehicle’ banner by the SMMT, registered huge increases over November 2018, up by 454% for petrol mild-hybrids. Diesel declined substantially once again, down from a 32% share in November 2018 to 23.6%. Petrol cars continue to dominate the market.
The SMMT puts the overall market decline down to weak private demand, with business registrations recording a less significant drop and fleet registrations actually rising. In total, 156,621 cars were registered last month.
SMMT Chief Executive Mike Hawes sayid: “These are challenging times for the UK new car market, with another fall in November reflecting the current climate of uncertainty. It’s good news, however, to see registrations of electrified cars surging again, and 2020 will see manufacturers introduce plenty of new, exciting models to give buyers even more choice.
"Nevertheless, there is still a long way to go for these vehicles to become mainstream and, to grow uptake further, we need fiscal incentives, investment in charging infrastructure and a more confident consumer.”
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Hybrid Car
This is very informative blog about the hybrid cars.Today Electric Acquire cars in the market.
Ok, 10 seconds of reserarch
Ok, 10 seconds of reserarch on the SMMT website reveals the following November data:
Electric sales (excluding mild hybrid) 10.3% (not 10.2%)
Full Electric 3%
Plug in Hybrid 2.8%
Hybrid 4.5%
The hybrids are all just tax fiddles.
The only statistic that really is relevant is pure electric sales, and this for some bizarre reason isn't given?
(You would assume reading Autocar that it was around 70% of the total)
Tax fiddles
I agree that a lot of plug in hybrids can be classed as tax fiddles if they never get plugged. I wouldn’t really class cars such as the Toyota Yaris hybrid as tax fiddles though and I think these make sense if you do a lot of driving in cities.