Plug-in hybrids are driving EV sales growth, but industry faces roadblocks ahead

zohaibahd

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In a nutshell: The electric vehicle revolution kicked into higher gear in the first quarter of 2024, with global EV sales jumping 18% compared to the same period last year. But while that double-digit growth looks impressive on paper, there are some concerning undercurrents rumbling beneath the surface.

The latest Counterpoint report has revealed that the biggest driver of Q1's sales surge is plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), which combine a gas engine with an electric motor and battery pack. PHEV sales were up a whopping 46% year-over-year as consumers were lured in by their cheaper upfront costs and the ability to switch to gasoline for longer drives.

Meanwhile, sales of pure battery electric vehicles (BEVs) increased at a much more modest 7% clip year-over-year. Demand is softening as the initial wave of early adopters has been largely tapped out and cost-conscious mainstream buyers get sticker shock over high EV prices.

The slowing BEV sales appear to be causing major headaches for automakers who have sunk billions into developing the next generation of electric cars, trucks, and SUVs. Despite the huge investments, some are still losing eye-watering amounts of money on each EV they sell as they struggle to rein in manufacturing costs.

Last month, Ford's EV division alone reported a staggering $1.3 billion loss in Q1 while delivering just 10,000 vehicles - a $132,000 loss per car. It's no wonder Ford and others have been scaling back ambitious BEV targets and pushing harder into the more lucrative PHEV market as a stopgap solution.

The overall EV market remains heavily tilted towards China, which saw sales spike 28% year-over-year in Q1 and now accounts for over half of global EV sales. In the US, growth was a much more modest 2% as higher prices and economic jitters put a damper on demand.

When it comes to individual automakers, there were some definite winners and losers in Q1. BYD had a huge quarter, posting 13% BEV sales growth globally while also dominating the PHEV market with a nearly one-third share. The Chinese upstart capitalized on its cost advantages to capture major market share, including exporting almost 100,000 EVs for 152% year-over-year growth.

In contrast, EV pioneer Tesla saw its sales dip 9% year-over-year despite regaining the overall BEV sales crown with a 19% market share. Tesla has been aggressively slashing prices to move metal, and it recently announced major layoffs impacting over 10% of its global workforce as it looks to cut costs.

The overall outlook for the rest of 2024 remains cloudy. While continued growth is expected, analyst Liz Lee warns "signs of a slowdown also loom and the annual growth may dip below 20%."

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When batteries improve so range anxiety is no longer a problem and charging does not take an hour or more, as well as when prices come down, EVs will sell like hot cakes.

Personally, I bought a 2024 Prius Prime PHEV for those reasons (except price).

I took a trip recently that was over 700 miles, round-trip. Most of that was on gas, however, I found a charging station at my destination, and drove around the area completely on electric while I was there after charging at the charging station. Then home again, on Gas.

I bought the car in January, however, and around my home, I've been mostly driving on electricity. I've only filled the gas tank four times since I bought it.

While I was at my destination, I talked with someone who was driving a Tesla - Model Y, IIRC.
I asked him about managing the charge, and he said it is not that difficult since it is usually easy for him to find a supercharger and charge around driving breaks.
 
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When batteries improve so range anxiety is no longer a problem and charging does not take an hour or more, as well as when prices come down, EVs will sell like hot cakes.
Don't forget mentioning the energy grid. A lot of NA can't properly handle a flood of EV's. Especially not in the summer when certain areas already deal with energy issues...

This is where PHEV's will be the best compromise for a long time to come.

Now, if I can find a reasonably priced one missing a lot of the unecessary/annoying tech (I will not accept a touchscreen over physical buttons in the center console), I might consider it for one of my next vehicles.
 
Don't forget mentioning the energy grid. A lot of NA can't properly handle a flood of EV's. Especially not in the summer when certain areas already deal with energy issues...

This is where PHEV's will be the best compromise for a long time to come.
Good point about the grid - but there are places that are building out the charging grid - for instance, the NY Thruway.

Now, if I can find a reasonably priced one missing a lot of the unecessary/annoying tech (I will not accept a touchscreen over physical buttons in the center console), I might consider it for one of my next vehicles.
My Prime has a touch screen AND a **** load of real, mechanical buttons for everything on the touch screen. Plus, for most things, I can simply use the built-in voice control which works great. I can make phone calls, send text messages, and ask it to read text messages to me, not to mention, tune the radio, turn up/down the volume, among other things.
 
Yup. I would not even consider an electric vehicle -- the charging infrastructure is just not there yet, and I don't want to have to plan my trips around where the electric stations are then hope they are not full, that they aren't broken, and so on.

On the other hand... in town my trips are short enough, I could plug it into the 120V outlet (my car port has a floodlight with an outlet on it) and keep it topped up. I would not bother spending the cash for a 240V (or 480V 3-phase?) charger. And I wouldn't have to, if I drove a little heavier than normal one week and the overnight charging didn't keep up, so what, I'll burn a small amount of gas that week.

I have a 2013 Chevy Cruze now, I was REALLY looking at getting a Volt but (at least at that time) the used price on them was insane. Getting even 15 miles range would cover my local driving (the older Volts got about 40 and the newer ones about 50), and I could just keep buying gas on a long trip. (And, at least specifically on the Volt, you could tell it you're going on a long trip, and instead of running the electric power down in like 50 miles or whatever, then getting like 40-50MPG off the gas in the like 4 gallon gas tank, it'll do 100+MPG for 400-500 miles by blending the electric and gas power from the start (at which point it's out of gas and electric power, so you gas up and get 40-50MPG for the rest of your trip if you don't plug it in anywhere.))

Oh, AND (some people who wanted to use 0 gas bitched up a storm about this but...) assuming you start the car and drive it around at all, it will make sure it burns through the gas every 6 months (so it burns through like 0.75-1 gallon a month fuel) to make sure you don't end up with stale gas clogging up the tank. (My parent's friend got a Pacifica hybrid and ran into that issue -- they drove it around town for like a year, once they finally went on a long trip it attempted to start the engine.. it wouldn't run at all because the 1+ year old fuel had fouled and clogged up the whole fuel system.)

In summary, no interest in electrics, the range anxiety is the real deal. But a plug-in hybrid would be perfect for my use, and I think they're probably a good solution for a lot of people.
 
Now, if I can find a reasonably priced one missing a lot of the unecessary/annoying tech (I will not accept a touchscreen over physical buttons in the center console), I might consider it for one of my next vehicles.
Perhaps look at getting a Kia Niro EV. It has buttons and looks like a normal vehicle inside and out. Range is 280 miles and it's fairly sporty for an SUV style. It also has a 7 year guarantee. I'd be quite content with one myself as I almost never drive that sort of distance in a day and I could charge it overnight at home once week which would make most of my driving almost free.
 
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Perhaps look at getting a Kia Niro EV. It has buttons and looks like a normal vehicle inside and out. Range is 280 miles and it's fairly sporty for an SUV style. It also has a 7 year guarantee. I'd be quite content with one myself as I almost never drive that sort of distance in a day and I could charge it overnight at home once week which would make most of my driving almost free.
Seconded. My parents have a Kia Niro Hybrid, and the interior is COMPLETELY conventional. It does have a touch screen but you can use the vehicle without having to touch it at all, there are plenty of buttons and knobs to operate the radio, heating and cooling, etc., without ever touching it. If you WANT to you can use the screen to do these things.

The EV interior looks the same, they replaced the gear shift with a knob and I think removed the tachometer from the instrument cluster. It appears to have the same array of buttons and knobs their hybrid has.

I agree 100%! I really don't like the move toward expecting people to take their eyes off the road to screw around with a touch screen, and the Niro does nicely avoid this.
 
To paraphrase the late great Isaac Asimov:

"EVs anywhere brighten the light of clean energy everywhere".

China is such a massive contributor to just pollution, nevermind any climate change stuff, that I cheer every step they take in the right direction. It will ultimately benefit us all.

India's next.
 
The reason China's EV market is booming is because the people don't really have a choice. They are told to buy this or that...OR ELSE.
 
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