Transport minister hints electric car grant will be scrapped entirely

Rachel Maclean, the Minister for the Future of Transport and Decarbonisation, has hinted that grants to help people buy expensive electric cars will be scrapped

Rachel Maclean, the Minister for the Future of Transport and Decarbonisation, has hinted that grants to help people buy expensive electric cars will be scrapped

Rachel Maclean, Minister for the Future of Transport and Decarbonisation, has dropped a fresh hint that the Government intents to scrap grants to help drivers buy expensive electric vehicles.

With the ban on sales of new petrol and diesel cars just eight-and-a-half years away, driver purchases are soon to be limited to battery-powered models only.

The high price of electric models remains one of the key stumbling blocks preventing motorists buying them in larger numbers today.

However, despite this, the Government in March slashed the Plug-in Car Grant, reducing both the subsidy amount by £500 to £2,500 and eligibility for only models priced up to £35,000 when it had previous been available for those up to £50,000. 

In a recent interview with Autocar, Mclean defended the decision to reduce the grant – and said its availability would be kept under under review.

The grant was first launched in 2011 and offered up to £5,000 off the price of new plug-in vehicles. 

In the prevailing decade, the grant amount and qualifying vehicle types has been frequently adjusted, with the latest changes coming just months ago.  

The move was lambasted by industry insiders and vehicle manufacturers at the time, with Mike Hawes, chief executive at the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, described the decision as the ‘wrong move at the wrong time’.

He said the government had risked putting the UK ‘even further behind other markets’ in terms of vehicle supply and said it sent the ‘wrong message’ to consumers’ who might have been considering buying a greener vehicle.

Ford of Britain chairman, Graham Hoare, said it was a ‘disappointing’ step that was ‘not conducive to supporting the zero emissions future we all desire’ while RAC head of roads policy Nicholas Lyes criticised MPs for making a decision that risked ‘people holding onto their older, more polluting vehicles for longer’.

The Plug-in Car Grant was first launched in 2011 and offered up to £5,000 off the price of new plug-in vehicles. However, today the value of the grant is just £2,500 - and only models costing less than £35,000 are eligible for the incentive

The Plug-in Car Grant was first launched in 2011 and offered up to £5,000 off the price of new plug-in vehicles. However, today the value of the grant is just £2,500 – and only models costing less than £35,000 are eligible for the incentive

The government's decision to lower the price eligibility for the grant means that not a single Tesla car qualifies for the scheme

The government’s decision to lower the price eligibility for the grant means that not a single Tesla car qualifies for the scheme 

However, Maclean, speaking exclusively to Autocar magazine, defended the actions. 

She said it was right for the Government to target grants only towards lower-priced electric vehicles because ‘that’s where people are less likely to be able to fund the cost out of their own pocket entirely’.

Reassurances for classic car owners 

Rachel Maclean told Autocar that while the government looks to press ahead with the ban on sales of new petrol and diesel vehicles from the end of the decade, there are no plans to ‘ask people to remove existing or classic cars or older cars from the road’.

Just months ago, a new Historic and Classic Vehicles Alliance was formed to lobby MPs about protecting classic car ownership in its drive to decarbonise the transport network.

It said that measures should be in place to protect these collectible vehicles, which cover an average annual mileage of just 1,200 miles. It means these cars are emitting around half the CO2 of a home computer.

Concerns have also been raised about the damaging impact new E10 petrol – sold from September under new eco rules – will have on older vehicles, which aren’t designed to run on greener fuels with higher mixes of bioethanol.

Responding to these complaints, Maclean told Autocar: ‘Obviously, the classic car community is a really important group and a really important part of the whole picture.

‘The existing policy is that obviously we won’t be allowing any new [petrol or diesel] vehicles to be sold [beyond 2030], but those existing vehicles can continue. It’s quite important, so hopefully I can say this and reassure people.

‘Even when we think about things like E10 petrol, we want to be very clear that we do consider the needs of classic cars and their drivers, because it’s a big part of their lives.’

The move means that not a single Tesla vehicle qualifies for the scheme, nor does Ford’s new Mustang Mach-e, which is priced from £40,270 in the UK.

In fact, fewer than 30 electric cars on sale today now qualify for the scheme – you can find out which ones are eligible in our full report. 

In the interview, Maclean also hinted that the days of the grant could be numbered, with the prospect of the incentive being scrapped completely.

The Government’s Road to Zero strategy in 2018 first stated that as the market became ‘better established and more competitive, the need for direct government financial support will decrease’.

It added: ‘We therefore expect to deliver a managed exit from the grant in due course and to continue to support the uptake of ultra low emission vehicles through other measures.’

Maclean – who owns an electric Jaguar i-Pace, which costs £65,000 and has never been eligible for the plug-in car grant – reiterated that statement to Autocar, saying: ‘I think it’s right to keep on looking at that [the future of the scheme], because ultimately we need to make sure we’re not using government money to help people buy cars who could have afforded them anyway. 

‘One of our concerns is to make this an equitable transition for everyone, and of course at the moment electric cars are a bit more expensive – although if you factor in the overall cost of ownership, they will be on a parity soon.’ 

The Department for Transport referred us to their plug-in car grant delivery plan when we approached the government agency for comment.

The plan says: ‘We have been clear since 2018 that we intend to reduce the plug-in car grant over time.’

It adds a final commitment statement, saying: ‘We will continue to fund the plug-in car grant until at least 2022/23.’ 

Rachel Maclean drives an electric Jaguar i-Pace, which costs from £65,000 and has never been eligible for the plug-in car grant

Rachel Maclean drives an electric Jaguar i-Pace, which costs from £65,000 and has never been eligible for the plug-in car grant

Hydrogen and synthetic fuels will play a part to decarbonise transport – but NOT for passenger cars 

In the interview, Maclean also suggested that hydrogen and synthetic e-fuels will play a part in decarbonising transport, but they will more likely be adopted for other vehicle types away from passenger cars. 

‘The truth about hydrogen is that it’s very expensive to produce,’ the transport minister explained. 

She added that the government will produce a hydrogen strategy very soon, but suggested it would be for decarbonising other vehicle types, including heavy goods vehicles, planes and ships.

Maclean added that synthetic fuels, like Porsche’s e-Fuel currently being developed in Chile, will also have ‘a role to play’ in driving down emissions, but explained it would more likely be used for the aviation and maritime industry.

Porsche believes synthetic fuels should be part of the proposal to reduce vehicle emissions, but Maclean says they will likely only be used for larger modes of transport that are difficult to decarbonise

Porsche believes synthetic fuels should be part of the proposal to reduce vehicle emissions, but Maclean says they will likely only be used for larger modes of transport that are difficult to decarbonise

It would appear, given these statements, that the Government is hard set on driving ahead with its push for battery electric cars to become mainstream.

A 200-plus page action plan was unveiled by Grant Shapps last week, with the ‘greenprint’ outlining how MPs plan to make all modes of domestic transport emissions-free by 2050.

This included a commitment to explore a zero emission vehicle mandate, which would see rules imposed on manufacturers demanding that a certain percentage of their sales each year are electric running up to the ban in 2030.

However, Maclean said MPs were allowing time for the industry to respond to the plans – which would mirror those in California – before it announced next steps.

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source: dailymail.co.uk