In April 2019, Tesla announced that it lost US$702m in the first quarter of 2019, selling 31% fewer vehicles than the prior quarter. A reduction in tax credits and falling demand for high-end models contributed to Tesla’s declines, but Tesla is not alone in slowed sales of electric vehicles (EVs). Many automakers and dealers are seeing stagnating or slower-than-expected sales of electric cars, even as automakers introduce new EV models.
EVs represent just 1% of new passenger vehicle production globally, a number we expect to reach only 10% by 2030. For all their promise as the car of the future for consumers and industry alike, the adoption of EVs does not match their electrifying initial acceleration. Why?
It’s time to log in (or subscribe).
Not a member? Subscribe now and let us help you understand the future of mobility.
Scroll
News
Magazine
Articles
Special Reports
Research
OEM Tracker
OEM Model Plans
OEM Production Data
OEM Sales Data
1 user
- News
- yes
- Magazine
- yes
- Articles
- yes
- Special Reports
- yes
- Research
- no
- OEM Tracker
- no
- OEM Model Plans
- no
- OEM Production Data
- no
- OEM Sales Data
- no
1 user
- News
- yes
- Magazine
- yes
- Articles
- yes
- Special Reports
- yes
- Research
- yes
- OEM Tracker
- yes
- OEM Model Plans
- yes
- OEM Production Data
- yes
- OEM Sales Data
- yes
Up to 5 users
- News
- yes
- Magazine
- yes
- Articles
- yes
- Special Reports
- yes
- Research
- yes
- OEM Tracker
- yes
- OEM Model Plans
- yes
- OEM Production Data
- yes
- OEM Sales Data
- yes
- News
- yes
- Magazine
- yes
- Articles
- yes
- Special Reports
- yes
- Research
- yes
- OEM Tracker
- yes
- OEM Model Plans
- yes
- OEM Production Data
- yes
- OEM Sales Data
- yes