Grant incentives removed for plug-in hybrids

Buyers of PHEVs will no longer get €2,500 grant from January

The Government has removed the purchase incentive offered to buyers of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs).

From January 1st the grant of €2,500 will no longer exist, although plug-in hybrids due to be delivered in 2021, but delayed due to the global semiconductor shortage, may avail of an extension to March 31st, 2022.

The changes do not impact on other incentives such as the financial supports for home chargers or reduced toll charges.

So far this year, 7,452 new PHEVs have been registered, making up 7.4 per cent of the new car market. That’s significantly up on last year, when PHEVs made up just 2.8 per cent of new car sales.

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Anger

Unsurprisingly, the car trade in Ireland has reacted with anger at this sudden removal of the grant. Brian Cooke, director general of the Society of the Irish Motor Industry said: "This is a terrible decision, which is anti-consumer and anti-environment, only adding to the cost for the customer making a better environmental decision.

“PHEVs are an important stepping stone to going fully electric, particularly in parts of rural Ireland where this is a lack of charging infrastructure. For the first quarter of next year, PHEVs have been ordered well in advance of the budget.

“The Government’s climate action plan hopes to have 94,000 PHEVs on our roads by 2025 and 290,000 by 2030. The removal of these incentives undermines this plan and runs counter to the aim of reducing emissions. While we accept supports cannot be in place forever, it is way too early to remove this grant. It is particularly unfair to consumers and the industry who have ordered cars for 2022 in expectation of this support continuing.”

According to Cooke: “The lack of understanding of both the motor vehicle supply chain and customer behaviour in ordering vehicles for the start of the following year will lead to huge financial and logistical problems for manufacturers, retailers and customers, as we emerge from a year that completely destabilised the industry with Covid-19 and Brexit.”

Range anxiety

Minister for Transport Eamon Ryan said: "It is important that we continue to support consumers in making the switch to electric vehicles, and I am pleased to confirm a significant increase in supports for fully electric vehicles in 2022, and the supporting recharging infrastructure.

“The arrival of long-range, fully electric vehicles on the market means that range anxiety can become a thing of the past. A single charge on one of these will cover well over 400km range. While plug-in hybrids provided a part-electric solution for motorists who took longer journeys or were concerned about EV [electic vehicle] range, they were a compromise in terms of both emissions and air quality.

“Now that range anxiety has been addressed by manufacturers, we will focus our exchequer resources on fully electric vehicles.”

Premature

AA Ireland described the Government’s announcement as premature. “We feel that the announcement of the cessation of PHEV grants in January, which will be just six months after they were halved from €5,000 to €2,500, is premature and will not encourage the move away from petrol or diesel cars,” said Paddy Comyn, head of communications at AA Ireland.

“PHEVs are a stepping stone for many people away from petrol and diesel cars and for some people, a battery electric vehicle [BEV] doesn’t quite yet meet their needs and a PHEV would have given many motorists the natural progression to move into a BEV. We acknowledge that the grant money will be used to increase the penetration of electric vehicles, but AA Ireland feels that this should have been at least extended to the end of June 2022, to allow motorists who were undecided to order a new car for next year and still take into account any delays due to the global shortage of semiconductors.”

One group that will welcome the removal of grants for PHEVs will be environmental think-tank Transport & Environment (T&E). It has long held that plug-in hybrids were effectively “fake electric cars” and are being used cynically by car makers to bring down average emissions figures (thereby avoiding EU fines), without ensuring that the customer actually plugs the car in regularly.

“Analysis of databases of real-world emissions of PHEVs by T&E shows rather than emitting on average 44g of CO2 per kilometre, as measured using a flawed laboratory test, most PHEV are actually emitting over 2½ times this level of CO2 emissions when driven on the road,” said a Transport & Environment report.

“Over the lifetime of the vehicle a new PHEV in 2020 will emits about 28 tonnes of CO2, slightly less than a conventional hybrid car (33 tonnes). In comparison, a petrol or diesel car emits 39 tonnes or 41 tonnes, respectively. A new battery electric car will emit about 3.8 tonnes from the electricity it uses.”

Neil Briscoe

Neil Briscoe

Neil Briscoe, a contributor to The Irish Times, specialises in motoring