Australia introduces vehicle pollution rules to boost EV uptake
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[April 19, 2023]
By Praveen Menon
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia said on Wednesday it would introduce new
standards targeting vehicle emissions to boost the uptake of electric
cars, as it looks to catch up with other developed economies.
Just 3.8% of cars sold in Australia last year were electric, well behind
other developed economies such as Britain and Europe, where electric
cars made up 15% and 17% of sales, respectively.
The new national electric vehicle strategy will introduce a fuel
efficiency standard that will outline how much carbon dioxide a car will
produce when running, Energy Minister Chris Bowen said in a news
conference.
"Fuel-efficient and electric vehicles are cleaner and cheaper to run -
today's announcement is a win-win for motorists," Bowen said in a
statement.
Details would be finalised in the coming months, he added.
Apart from Russia, Australia was the only developed country to either
not have or be developing fuel efficiency standards, which encourage
manufacturers to supply more electric and no-emission vehicles.
Transport is the third largest source of carbon emissions in Australia -
one of the world's biggest emitters on a per capita basis. The
initiative will help cut the country's emissions by at least 3 million
tonnes of carbon by 2030, and over 10 million tonnes by 2035, Bowen
said.
The Electric Vehicle Council (EVC) welcomed the move but said Australia
must bring in strong standards or "remain the world’s dumping ground for
dated, high-emission vehicles," chief executive Behyad Jafari said.
On average, new cars in Australia use 40% more fuel than the European
Union and 20% more than the United States, with studies showing the
introduction of a fuel efficiency standard could save motorists A$519
($349) per year, Bowen said.
Greens party leader Adam Bandt said the government's strategy needs to
accelerate and needs electric vehicle targets as well as the fuel
efficiency standards.
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A Tesla Model X is photographed
alongside a Model S at a Tesla electric car dealership in Sydney,
Australia, May 31, 2017. REUTERS/Jason Reed
CHARGING DEBATE
Demand for electric vehicles is growing in Australia, although
supply has not kept up with demand in the absence of incentives for
automakers.
Australia's centre-left Labor government last year flagged plans to
introduce new regulations to increase sales of electric cars.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who won power last year on a
promise of climate policy reforms, cut taxes for electric vehicles
and raised Australia's 2030 target for cutting carbon emissions to a
43% reduction from 2005 levels.
The initiatives came after about a decade of inaction under the
previous Liberal government, which set Australia behind all its
peers.
Former Prime Minister Scott Morrison said in 2019 that policies to
reduce vehicle emissions would "end the weekend", while other
critics said it would be a death knell for popular utility vehicles,
or utes, used by builders and farmers.
Bowen acknowledged more needs to be done on infrastructure to charge
EV cars.
There are about 83,000 EVs on Australian roads and as at December
2022, there were just over 4,900 public chargers located at fewer
than 2,400 sites.
"We're way behind the rest of the world again," Bowen said in a
radio interview later in the day.
"We are fixing that. We've got a policy of putting in a fast charger
once every 150 kilometres on the highway. I'll be saying more about
that pretty soon," he said.
($1 = 1.4868 Australian dollars)
(Additional reporting by Renju Jose and Lewis Jackson in Sydney;
Editing by Lincoln Feast)
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