The adoption of plug-in electric vehicles in Australia is driven mostly by state-based electric vehicle targets and monetary incentives to support the adoption and deployment of low- or zero-emission vehicles. The monetary incentives include electric vehicle subsidies, interest-free loans, registration exemptions, stamp duty exemptions, the luxury car tax exemption and discounted parking for both private and commercial purchases. The Clean Energy Finance Corporation, energy providers, car loan providers and car insurance providers also offer their own financial incentives for electric vehicle purchases including Macquarie Bank offering the lowest electric car loan of 2.99%.[16][17][18]
The Victorian and New South Wales governments target between 50% and 53% of new car sales to be electric vehicles by 2030.[19][20][21] The New South Wales Government also aim for the vast majority of new cars sold in the state to be electric vehicles by 2035.[20] The New South Wales Government are also planning and stated they must ban the sale of internal combustion-engine vehicles by 2035.[22][23] Similarly, the Victorian Government's "Infrastructure Victoria" initiative called for the government to ban the sale of petrol and diesel engine vehicles by 2035 at the latest.[24]South Australia's Liberal government aim for 100% of new car sales to be electric vehicles by 2035,[25] and plan to ensure electric vehicles are mainstream and the "common choice" for new vehicle purchases in 2030.[26] The ACT also plan for 100% of new car sales to be EVs by 2030.[27][28] The Australian states with EV sales targets represent approximately 65% of the Australian population.[19][20][25][29] This means 65% of the Australian population has a target to reach more than 50% EV car sales by 2030.[29][19][20][25] However, this target could be reached sooner if the two largest states governments of New South Wales and Victoria enact their plan to ban the sale of petrol and diesel vehicles by 2035.[24][22] The Australian government is planning and anticipating to have 1.7 million electric cars on the road by 2030.[30] High adoption of electric vehicles could save Australian drivers $500 billion by 2035.[31] While a slow uptake of electric vehicles would result in a 1 trillion cost to the Australian health system by 2050.[32] Although air pollution would cause the deaths of at least 2500 people across Sydney and Melbourne in the year 2030, even if the federal government swiftly clamped down on poisonous car fuels.[33]
A Federal Government target for 100% of car sales to be electric vehicles before 2050 could also be included in the Federal Government's National Electric Vehicle Strategy.[34] This is because Prime Minister Scott Morrison stated in 2021 that the government's goal is to reach net-zero emissions by 2050, which would require a national transition to 100% electric vehicles before 2050.[35][20]Scott Morrison also delivered a target for Australia to reach net-zero emissions by 2050 to the 2021 UN Climate Conference.[36] Australia also backed the COP26 Breakthrough Agenda for electric vehicles to be the "new normal" worldwide by 2030.[37] 60% of Australians also supported a net-zero emissions target by 2050.[38] The New South Wales treasurer, Matt Kean, said the federal Nationals should resign if they didn't support a national target for net-zero emissions by 2050.[39] To reach net-zero emissions by 2050, electric vehicles will also need to represent 50% of car sales by 2035.[40][20] Although the Federal Government's projection in 2021, is for 30% of new car sales to be EVs by 2030.[41] While Labor project 90% of new car sales to be EVs by 2030.[42]
Evolution of electric vehicle market
Early development
In 2008 Australia started producing its first commercial all-electric vehicle. Originally called the Blade Runner, its name was changed to Electron, and was exported to New Zealand with one purchased by the then Environment Minister Dr. Nick Smith.[43][44] The Electron is based on the Hyundai Getz and has proven popular with government car pools.[45] In 2012, Holden Australia developed an Australian-made Electric Commodore in partnership with EV Engineering with 160 km range in Port Melbourne.[46]
Better Place
In October 2008, Better Place announced plans to deploy charging network to power electric cars in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane in partnership with Australian power company AGL and finance group Macquarie Capital.[47] The initial network deployment was planned to take place in Canberra in late 2011.[48] As of December 2011[update], 12 public charge spots (power outlets, not battery swap stations) had been installed in Australia.[49] The roll out of the Australian network was initially planned to begin 6 months to a year after the roll out of the network in Denmark.[50]
In December 2012, Renault postponed the launch of the Renault Fluence Z.E. as the necessary infrastructure was not yet in place.. Better Place explained that delays in the deployments in Israel and Denmark are reflecting in the Australian roll out, which would take place between 12 and 18 months behind the other markets.[51] Better Place ultimately went bankrupt with the only sign they ever existed being a few lone silver posts standing in (mostly university) car parks.
Introduction of series production electric vehicles
Beginning in mid-2009, a twelve-month field trial was conducted with the Mitsubishi i-MiEV with potential electric vehicle customers, such as local, state and federal government bodies, and major fleet operators.[52] Leasing for fleet customers began in Australia in August 2010.[53][54] As of May 2011[update], a total of 110 i-MiEVs had been leased to government and corporate fleets, while retail sales to the public began in August 2011. As of December 2012[update], 125 i-MiEVs had been sold in the country, 30 of which were sold by December 2011.[55]
A two-year fleet trial of 10 converted Ford Focus Electric cars, that also included 14 i-MiEVs and 3 Toyota Prius PHEVs,[56] commenced in Western Australia in 2010.[57] Each converted car was equipped with a 23 kWh battery pack, a 27 kW DC motor and a 1000A motor controller. These cars were then used in the study as regular fleet vehicles to find their usability for everyday driving.[58]
In July 2011, Nissan Australia provided 16 Nissan Leaf vehicles, to be used by both personal and commercial users, for an electric vehicle trial in Victoria.[59] A total of 19 Leafs were registered in 2011, while sales of the Nissan Leaf in Australia began in June 2012—77 units were sold during 2012.[55][60] The Holden Volt, a plug-in hybrid model, was released onto the Australian market by late 2012 and a total of 80 units were delivered during that year.[55]
A total of 258 plug-in electric cars were sold during 2012, with the i-MiEV as the top selling model, with 95 units sold.[61] Sales during 2013 totaled 304 units, up 20% from 2012. The Nissan Leaf was the top selling plug-in car with 188 units followed by the Holden Volt with 101 units. The electric vehicle market share in 2013 was 0.036% of total new car sales in the country.[62][63]
As of September 2013[update], the largest public charging networks exist in the capital cities of Perth and Melbourne, with around 30 stations (7 kW AC) established in both cities—smaller networks exist in other capital cities. An Australian standard for charging connectors does not exist as of September 2013.[64]
Since 2014 Mitsubishi is no longer importing the i-MiEV after slow sales due to the high price and due to competition from the more successful Outlander plug-in hybrid electric vehicle for battery components. Sales during the first quarter of 2014 totaled 42 units, representing a 0.015% market share of new car sales,[65] and during the first half of 2014 sales reached 114 units.[66]
Deliveries of the Tesla Model S in Australia began in late 2014.[67] Deliveries of the BMW i3 also commenced at the end of 2014. Sales during 2014 totaled 1,228 units, up 288% from 2013.[68] The plug-in electric segment reached a 0.11% market share of total new car sales in the country, up threefold from 0.036% in 2013.[62][68] The surge in sales was due to the introduction of the Mitsubishi Outlander P-HEV, which sold 895 units during 2014, and became Australia's top selling plug-in electric vehicle.[68] Cumulative sales in the Australian market since 2010 reached over 1,950 units by the end of December 2014, up from 304 units in 2013.[55][62][68][69][70][71]
A total of 246 Holden Volts had been sold in the country by mid April 2015, with the stock of the first generation almost empty. General Motors announced that it will not build the second generation Volt in right-hand-drive configuration, so the Holden Volt will be discontinued in the country when the remaining stock is sold out.[72] As of April 2015[update], the following models are available in the Australian market: Nissan Leaf, Tesla Model S, both variants of the BMW i3 (REx and all-electric), BMW i8, Mitsubishi Outlander P-HEV, and Porsche plug-in hybrids, 918 Spyder, Panamera and Cayenne.[72][73][74] Other models scheduled to be launched in the country include the Audi A3 e-tron and the Audi Q7 e-tron.[72]
As of December 2014[update], a total of 65 Model S cars were registered in New South Wales and only four in Victoria.[69] At the end of March 2015, registrations totaled 119 in New South Wales and 54 in Victoria. Although there were no sales figures reported for Tesla in other states, the combined sales of these two states alone were enough for the Model S to rank as the top selling all-electric car in the country for the first quarter of 2015, ahead of the BMW i3 (46) and the Nissan Leaf (31).[69] Australia's top selling plug-in electric vehicle for the first quarter of 2015 was the Outlander P-HEV, with 198 units sold,[75] again in the first quarter of 2016 ranked as the top selling plug-in with 195 units,[76] and continued as the country's all-time best selling plug-in with 2,015 units sold through March 2016 since its introduction in 2013.[77]
As of December 2016[update], about 1,000 Nissan Leafs have been sold since its introduction in the country in 2012.[78] The Mitsubishi Outlander P-HEV is the country's all-time top-selling plug-in electric vehicle with 2,906 units sold through March 2018.[79]
Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles
On 26 March 2021, the Hyundai Nexo became the first fuel cell electric vehicle (FCEV) to be released in Australia with the ACT government to operate a fleet of 20 Nexos.[80][81] The Nexo will be available to the public on special order for lease.[82] Coinciding with the release of the Nexo, the first publicly available hydrogen refuelling station opened on the 26th at Fyshwick in Canberra operated by ActewAGL.[80][83] Hyundai operates a refuelling station from its headquarters at Macquarie Park in Sydney which was established in 2015 for a trial of the Nexo's predecessor the ix35 FCEV.[84]
On 13 April 2021, the second generation Toyota Mirai was released in Australia with an initial allocation of 20 Mirai for organisations and businesses.[85][86] The Mirai will not be offered to the public which Toyota estimates "might be two to three years away".[87] Toyota had earlier on 29 March 2021 commissioned a hydrogen production facility together with a hydrogen refuelling station at its former manufacturing site at Altona in Melbourne to coincide with the release of the Mirai.[86] The refuelling station is the second public station in Australia.[88] Toyota had previously developed a mobile hydrogen refuelling station that could be transported on a truck that was used for the first generation Mirai loan program between 2018 and 2019.[85][89]
The Victorian Hydrogen Hub is set to be constructed at the CSIRO's Clayton campus.[90][91]Western Australia intend to invest in hydrogen refuelling stations.[92] The Queensland government is using a fleet of Hyundai FCEVs and is investing in hydrogen refuelling stations.[93]
Growth and availability of electric vehicles
Plug-in electric cars in Australia grew 300% from just 2,216 sales in 2018 to 6,718 in 2019.[94]Tesla accounted for 70% of these electric car sales, mostly through the release of the Tesla Model 3 in August which accounted for two-thirds of electric car sales in 2019.[95][96] Electric vehicle sales were also stated earlier to have doubled in Australia in 2019 compared to 2018.[97] In 2019, the Electric Vehicle Council expected electrical vehicle model choices to continue to expand which would consequently promote a significant increase in EV sales in Australia.[98] This is from 22 all-electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles available in 2019 to 31 by the end of 2020.[98] This compares to more than 150 electric car models being available in Europe and elsewhere.[95]
The MG ZS EV which received 100 pre-orders in November 2019 and since had its price reduced to $40,990, plan to introduce free charging along with supercharger network operators such as Chargefox for their 2021 model.[99] MG is also stated as intending to sell 3,000 ZS EVs in Australia in 2021 alone.[99]
In December 2020, there were almost 100 used electric cars listed on carsales.com.au.[100] 42% of used electric cars were listed under $50,000.[100] While 23% of used electric cars were listed under $20,000.[100] The lowest price for a used electric car in Australia was $11,990 as of December 2020 and $8,900 as of 2021.[100]
Carsales.com.au also stated 47% of buyers on their website considered buying an EV.[101] In March 2022, carsales.com.au reported that 1 in 5 searches were for electric vehicles in Australia.[102] Carsales also confirmed that the cost and price of EVs was the most important factor and vehicle range was the second most important factor among potential EV purchasers.[101] 75% of Australians aged between 25 and 34 were also reported as considering EVs on carsales.com.au.[101]
Electric vehicles by Australian state/territory in 2020[103]
Electric vehicle policies in Australia include incentives such as electric vehicle subsidies, interest-free loans, registration exemptions, stamp duty exemptions, the luxury car tax exemption and discounted parking for both private and commercial purchases.
Charging infrastructure
In 2021, there were more than 3,000 public charging stations installed across Australia, representing a ratio of 7.2 electric vehicles for every installed public charger.[21] Australia is also Tesla's 11th largest market for electric vehicle superchargers in the world.[116] Infrastructure Australia (IA) had identified the development of a fast-charging network for electric cars as one of Australia's highest national priorities from 2020 to 2025.[117] The Federal Government pledged to spend $74.5 million on charging infrastructure in the budget in 2021.[118]
The Federal Government is also contributing $15 million to a national electric vehicle charging network built by Evie Networks and connecting Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney, Adelaide and Brisbane.[119] Extra stations will also be built in Tasmania, Perth and regional Queensland.[119] In 2021, Evie Networks announced they would spend $25 million on 300 additional Australian made Tritium electric vehicle chargers across Australia.[120] The South Australian and Federal Liberal Government also signed an agreement in 2021 for combined funding of new electric vehicle charging infrastructure in the state.[121] Chargefox is Australia's largest electric vehicle charger network operator and have 1,400 charging stations across Australia, with a plan to have 5,000 by 2025.[122] 2,000 of these chargers will have fast and/or ultra-rapid charging speeds.[123] Australian company Bell Hub plan for 60 ultra-fast solar powered electric vehicle charging stations from converted car washes with free wi-fi and barista coffee.[124][125] Bell Hub is chaired by former NSW Liberal leader Kerry Chikarovski.[124] The plan is to expand the network to around 316 charging stations by 2025.[124][126] JOLT Charge intend to offer 5,000 free electric vehicle charging stations across Australia from Black Rock's $100 million funding.[127] The Type 2 CCS charging standard is also the most commonly used in Australia.[128] City of Port Phillip in Melbourne also offer kerb charging permits to residents and businesses to enable kerbside charging.[129] Ampol plan to roll out more than 100 charging stations with rapid 50 kW chargers through a $100 million investment across Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Perth, Geelong, Newcastle, Wollongong, NSW's Central Coast, Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast.[130] Vicinity plan to have 30 shopping centres with 103 fast charging stations to be rolled out. These chargers will have capacity of at least 100 kW.[131]
The Federal Government's Future Fuels Fund and ARENA have provided $25 million in funding for fast chargers across Australia to open between 2022 and mid 2023.[132] In 2021, the Federal Government announced $250 million to support public charging infrastructure, fleet infrastructure, vehicle trials and smart charging infrastructure in households.[41] However, the NSW Government was spending almost as much as the federal government is spending in NSW to support new infrastructure for electric cars.[133] The Federal Government will also fund 50,000 charging stations for Australian households.[134] MG announced they will be donating 3,000 chargers across the country in regional areas in 2021.[135]BP planned to roll out a charging network across Australia and New Zealand in 2022 using Brisbane-made Tritium chargers.[136]
Australia also has electric boat chargers in docks across New South Wales, Queensland and Western Australia.[137]
Public charging infrastructure in Australia in 2018[141]
VIC
ACT
SA
NSW
TAS
QLD
NT
WA
Total number of charging stations
216
20
76
161
21
162
5
122
Charging stations per 100,000 residents
3.40
3.17
4.40
2.04
4.02
3.27
2.03
4.72
Total #
AC
208
17
70
148
21
138
5
107
DC
8
3
6
13
0
24
0
15
Total #
Capital City
114
20
32
86
4
58
3
77
Regional
102
0
44
75
17
104
2
45
The number of charging stations in Australia has increased substantially, with a 64 per cent increase from 2017 to 2018 as data reveals that charging locations available increased from 476 in 2017 to 783 in 2018.[141]
Sales
Electric vehicle sales in Australia in Q1 2021[142]
Australia's most popular electric cars are similar to the most popular electric cars among New Zealanders.[145] In 2020, New Zealand's most popular electric cars were the Tesla Model 3, Hyundai Kona Electric, Nissan Leaf and the MG ZS EV.[145]
^ abcdPontes, Jose (15 January 2015). "Australia Full Year 2014 (Updated)". EV Sales. Retrieved 15 January 2015. Tesla Model S sales estimate is too low, see next source.
^Porsche Australia. "Porsche Australia official website". Retrieved 5 January 2015. Click on models for details of the two S E-Hybrid models and the 918 Spyder.
^Pontes, Jose (10 July 2015). "Australia Q1 2015". EV Sales. Retrieved 13 July 2015.
^Jose, Pontes (10 May 2016). "Australia Q1 2016". EVSales.com. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
^"Global Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV Sales Pass the 100,000 Mark" (Press release). UK: Mitsubishi Motors UK. 19 May 2016. Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2016. As of March 2016[update], a total of 65,529 units have been sold in Europe (21,052 in the UK and 44,477 in the rest of Europe), 33,730 in Japan, 2,015 in Australia and 259 in the rest of the world, for a total of 101,533 units sold worldwide.