WORLD / EUROPE
One in five cars on Norway’s roads are electric
Published: Dec 13, 2022 07:45 PM Updated: Dec 13, 2022 07:42 PM
Electric cars produced by Tesla’s Shanghai Gigafactory are seen at a port in Shanghai on May 15, 2022. It is the second batch from Tesla’s Shanghai factory to head overseas within one week. The factory resumed production on April 19. Photo: VCG

Electric cars produced by Tesla’s Shanghai Gigafactory are seen at a port in Shanghai on May 15, 2022. It is the second batch from Tesla’s Shanghai factory to head overseas within one week. The factory resumed production on April 19. Photo: VCG


Electric vehicles account for one out of five cars in Norway, a share that has doubled in less than three years, the Norwegian Electric Vehicle Association said Monday.

"The snowball is rolling faster and faster and a growing number of good electric car models are on Norway's roads," the head of the association, Christina Bu, said on its website.

While it took almost 10 years for the country's electric car fleet to go from zero to 10 percent of the market - a level reached in March 2020 - it took less than three years for the share to then double to 20 percent, the body said.

A market share of 30 percent could be reached within two years, the association said.

By comparison, 0.64 percent of cars on France's roads were electric, according to French government figures from January 2021.

Norway, which is paradoxically Western Europe's biggest oil and gas producer, aims for all its new cars to be "zero emission" - in other words, electric and hydrogen - by 2025.

Clean cars benefit from several advantages in the Scandinavian country. Among other things, they are largely tax-free, enjoy lower fares for road tolls and public parking, and can in some cases use public transport vehicle lanes.

Electric cars now represent about 80 percent of Norway's new car registrations, as an increasing number of models become available.

With the growing popularity of these cars, and the loss of income for the state, Norwegian authorities have started to roll back some of the benefits.