EU needs to up electric vehicle support to fend off Chinese competition, says study by climate group
- In a report released on Monday, the climate group Transport & Environment said EV sales growth in the bloc had slowed
- The EU is currently negotiating a proposed package of climate proposals, which includes an effective ban on the sale of new fossil-fuel vehicles from 2035

The European Union needs to provide more regulatory incentives for its carmakers to scale up fully electric vehicle (EV) production or risk losing market share to Chinese rivals, according to a study by climate group Transport & Environment.
In the T&E report ‘From boom to brake: is the e-mobility transition stalling?’ released on Monday, the group said EV sales growth in the bloc had slowed, with fully electric cars making up 11 per cent of sales in the first half of 2022 when historical trends suggested they should have reached 13 per cent.
In the meantime, Chinese carmakers including BYD and Great Wall Motor are looking to gain a foothold in the EU and have recently scored high safety ratings for their EVs.
T&E estimates Chinese-made EVs accounted for 5 per cent of fully electric car sales in the EU in the first half of this year and could have an 18 per cent share of the market by 2025.
The EU is currently negotiating a proposed package of climate proposals, which includes an effective ban on the sale of new fossil-fuel vehicles from 2035.
