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 UK Eases EV Sales Mandate to Help Car Makers

UK Eases EV Sales Mandate to Help Car Makers

In a big relief to the UK’S car manufacturers such as Rolls-Royce, Vauxhall, and Land Rover as the UK government on Monday announced a package to back the industry by providing them certainty, stability, and support in the face of global economic headwinds.

Accordingly, the Zero Emission Vehicle Mandate will be changed to make it easier for industry to upgrade to make electric vehicles (EVs), while delivering the manifesto commitment to stop sales of new petrol and diesel cars by 2030, which will help even more British consumers access the benefits of cheap to run electric vehicles.

The package will be backed by a modern Industrial Strategy, to be published in full this summer, which will help British businesses realise the potential of industries of the future.

The changes will help the car industry by increasing flexibility of the mandate for manufacturers up to 2030, so that more cars can be sold in later years when demand is higher, allowing hybrid cars – like the Toyota Prius and Nissan e-Power – to be sold until 2035 to help ease the transition and give industry more time to prepare, continue to boost demand for EVs on top of the $2.96 billion that the government has already been spending to boost British manufacturing, improve charging infrastructure – with a new charge-point popping up every half an hour, pressing on with tax breaks to help people switch to EVs and support for the car industry will be kept under review as the impact of new tariffs become clear.

Tackling Global Headwinds

This package is the latest in a series of pro-growth measures that the UK Prime Minister Kier Starmer has announced to counter the impact of new global headwinds and build a strong, resilient economy with more well-paid jobs.

Keir Starmer said that global trade is being transformed and they must go further and faster in reshaping the UK’s economy and the country through “Plan for Change.”

“I am determined to back British brilliance. Now more than ever UK businesses and working people need a government that steps up, not stands aside. That means action, not words. So today I am announcing bold changes to the way we support our car industry,” he said.

This will help ensure home-grown firms can export British cars built by British workers around the world and the industry can look forward with confidence, as well as back with pride. It will boost growth that puts money in working people’s pockets, he added.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said that the package of strengthening reforms will protect and create jobs – making the UK a global automotive leader in the switch to EVs – all the while meeting the nation’s core manifesto commitment to phase out petrol and diesel vehicles by 2030.

Heidi said that the demand for EVs was already rising, with the latest data showing sales in March were up over 40% on last year, which will help with the transition.

“There is a huge opportunity to be harnessed here – with the UK being the largest EV market in Europe. Over $7.73 billion of private funding is lined up to be invested in the UK’s charge-point roll-out by 2030. Since July, the government has also seen $44.84 billion of private investment announced into UK’s clean energy industries.

“The wide-ranging package of measures introduced today will also exempt small and micro-volume manufacturers – supercar brands including McLaren and Aston Martin – from the Mandate targets, preserving some of the UK car industry’s most iconic jewels for years to come,” Heidi added.

Global Business Magazine

Global Business Magazine

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