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Transportation Earth Power

Norway Powers Ahead (Electrically): Over Half New Car Sales Now Electric or Hybrid (reuters.com) 192

Sales of electric and hybrid cars rose above half of new registrations in Norway in 2017, a record aided by generous subsidies that extended the country's lead in shifting from fossil-fuel engines, data showed on Wednesday. From a report: Pure electric cars and hybrids, which have both battery power and a diesel or petrol motor, accounted for 52 percent of all new car sales last year in Norway against 40 percent in 2016, the independent Norwegian Road Federation (OFV) said. "No one else is close" in terms of a national share of electric cars, OFV chief Oeyvind Solberg Thorsen said. "For the first time we have a fossil-fuel market share below 50 percent." Norway exempts new electric cars from almost all taxes and grants perks that can be worth thousands of dollars a year in terms of free or subsidized parking, re-charging and use of toll roads, ferries and tunnels.
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Norway Powers Ahead (Electrically): Over Half New Car Sales Now Electric or Hybrid

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @11:27AM (#55855463)
    When your economy is based on extraction of fossil fuels, it's easy to put out public stories about your progressive energy policies and socialist government and laugh all the way to the bank as the checks from the oil wells are deposited.
    • by mikael ( 484 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @11:33AM (#55855507)

      Norway is diversifying away from oil production and into renewable energies like offshore wind farms and hydroelectric power generation. The same technologies used to make oil rigs and power lines resistant to salt water corrosion can be used for offshore wind farms as well. With a population around 5 million and twice the land area of the UK, they can make fast economic changes. Plus they invested the revenue from the oil industry into a trust fund for the country.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        That's all true but doesn't change the original AC's point: Norway is only able to do so because they made vast amounts of money from Oil.

        Presenting them as some kind of ideal "look how great they are, they're the furthest along in the migration to EV's" without explicitly acknowledging that they can only do so because the they extracted giga-tons of carbon from their soil that is now heating up the planet is intellectually dishonest.

        Posted AC to conserve the mod point I gave the original AC.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          In other words, they managed to maintain their sovereign wealth fund, rather than blowing it like petrojurisdictions like Venezuela and Alberta did, and now can channel that money into the next generation of energy production and use. You'll note that Saudi Arabia is doing the same thing now, but on an even larger scale.

          The fact that major oil producing nations like Saudi Arabia and Norway are clearly planning for a post-oil future ought to tell you something.

        • Right. Good on them.
          Why aren't other oil rich countries doing the same?
          Why doesn't the US do the same?
          They seem to be smarter and less corrupt than others.

          • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

            Why doesn't the US do the same? For starters, it doesn't impose crushing taxes on the private ownership of vehicles. If you already own a vehicle in the US, it's because these kinds of policies didn't exist there in the past.

            This is Norway choosing to loosen it's iron grip on the free market to favor one particular option and pick a winner.

            "Norway loosens oppressive tax regime to benefit electric cars"

            It sounds a lot less impressive all around when you acknowledge that Norway is actively sabotaging average

            • by mspohr ( 589790 )

              Fossil fuels in the US benefit from massive subsidies and get a free ride on the pollution they create. This is a huge market distortion so not exactly a "free market".
              Norway rightly taxes fossil fuel cars to make them pay for their pollution and fuel subsidies.
              You really have to ask why the US has distorted the "free market" in favor of fossil fuels. (Hint: follow the money)

          • Why doesn't the US do the same?

            Because electric car subsidies are one of the least effective methods to help the environment.

            Spending the same amount of money on literacy and contraceptives for 3rd World women will have 100 times the impact over a century.

            • by mspohr ( 589790 )

              Transportation related CO2 emissions are the greatest single source of climate change. Makes sense to tax fossil fuel cars and subsidize EVs.
              (The rest of you comment is irrelevant to this discussion.)

              • by boa ( 96754 )

                Transportation related CO2 emissions are the greatest single source of climate change. Makes sense to tax fossil fuel cars and subsidize EVs.
                (The rest of you comment is irrelevant to this discussion.)

                Transportation is not the greatest single source in the US.
                https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissio... [epa.gov]

              • > Makes sense to tax fossil fuel cars and subsidize EVs.

                Not when you need to
                1) run a fossil-fueled electric generator
                2) put up with line losses getting the electricity to charging sites (or home garages)
                3) put up with the inevitable conversion losses during battery-charging (2nd law of thermodynamics)

                • by mspohr ( 589790 )

                  Only fools are building new fossil fool fueled generators.
                  Line losses are a rounding error.
                  Charging losses are less than 10%
                  OTOH, fossil fuel engines waste 75% of the energy input.

          • Why doesn't the USA do the same? Think about what Norway has and the USA does not. Norway has hydroelectric coming out their ears. The USA does not.

            What's green energy and grows all over the USA? Sounds like the start of a joke, and I guess it is. The answer is corn. While Norway has been building hydro dams for practically centuries now the USA had to look for other means to get green energy.

            I've heard that burning coal to charge electric cars would be greener than burning gasoline in cars. That's g

            • by mspohr ( 589790 )

              Solar and wind are cheaper than coal, nuclear, natural gas.
              Corn ethanol has been shown to be more expensive and more polluting than oil as well as damaging the environment. It is subsidized to help our poor farmers and is a boondoggle.

              • Let's assume what you say is true, and I won't say that it is or isn't. For now.

                How long have we seen solar and wind cheaper than coal? Wind got to be cheaper than coal when? 5 years ago? 10? 25? What about solar? When did that become cheaper than coal? Last week?

                In Norway coal never really caught on, hydro was just too cheap to not use. In the USA we've been burning coal for 150 years until the economics shifted. It's going to take time for the electrical industry to shift. A coal power plant is

                • by mspohr ( 589790 )

                  Just about everything is cheaper than natural gas.
                  https://www.eia.gov/electricit... [eia.gov]
                  The table doesn't include solar and wind but the prices on these have dropped to about 3 cents/kwh ... cheaper than anything

                  • Did you even read that chart? Look at the bottom.

                    Gas Turbine and Small Scale category consists of gas turbine, internal combustion, photovoltaic, and wind plants.

                    That chart is in mills/kWh. A mill is a tenth of a cent. So, yes, according to that chart wind and solar is quite likely 3 cents/kWh. Also according to that chart nuclear is 2.5 cents/kWh. Fossil steam is not defined on that chart but I assume that lumps coal and natural gas boilers together so we cannot see if coal or natural gas is cheaper from this chart. Hydroelectric is cheapest of all, which is not surprising, but we just can't build more dams unl

            • by boa ( 96754 )

              Corn ethanol is not very energy efficient. Go for Gen IV nuclear and electric cars.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      • by Pinky's Brain ( 1158667 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @11:55AM (#55855683)

        Not really an example to the world though, the countries with massive oil based trade surpluses and huge amounts of hydro-potential are Norway and Norway.

        This is just Norway investing in autarky, it's not really very interesting for the rest of the world. Unless you want to emigrate to Norway, which wouldn't be a bad idea.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @11:58AM (#55855703) Homepage Journal

        Interesting that in Norway, a country that is sparsely populated in many parts and very cold (which reduces range) a lot of people like EVs. All the rubbish about them being unsuitable for the mass market or countries where you need to travel far or with bad weather is demonstrably wrong.

        • How many households have pure electric (not hybrid) as their only car? I very much doubt it exceeds a single digit percentage.

        • Perhaps more Norwegians can afford them as a second car, or perhaps there is nowhere to go. or can't afford to go anywhere anyway.
    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Norway is promoting electric vehicles because it has serious air pollution problems. They could address this by banning the use of wood burning, which is popular there, but because they have a lot of renewable energy reserves offering an electric car carrot is more politically feasible than threatening the public with a wood stove stick.

      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        It seems like they would be far better off working to wean people off of wood stoves. It seems like the biggest pollution problems would be the dense urban centers rather than the boonies. Managing what's going on in their bigger cities doesn't seem like it would be such an insurmountable problem.

        If they don't have a car culture (like LA), then switching to electric isn't going to buy them much there.

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          Yeah, banning wood stoves is the obvious solution. But getting people to change their behavior is difficult and it takes a long time, even when that behavior is killing them. If you need a quick change in results you need to do the non-obvious as well as the obvious.

  • well, OK (Score:4, Insightful)

    by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @11:28AM (#55855471) Journal

    Norway exempts new electric cars from almost all taxes and grants perks that can be worth thousands of dollars a year in terms of free or subsidized parking, re-charging and use of toll roads, ferries and tunnels.

    Well, OK ... if you basically paid me to own one, I'd probably have one too.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      It's anything but "pays you to own one". It's just that ICE vehicles are super-expensive, while EVs are just "normal priced". The other incentives, like parking, don't amass to that much money on average, and there's no tax deduction or rebate or anything like that (like the US's deduction).

      On one hand, the government misses out on all of those sales taxes for EVs. On the other hand, I'm sure that a lot of people were buying a car specifically because they could afford an EV and wouldn't have purchased a

      • So in other words, they can afford an EV to use as a second car and still have an ICE reliable enough to go on a longer trip with. I wonder how many of them *travel* with their EV? I wonder how many wouldn't have purchased a second car at all without juicy EV subsidies that might not last forever.
        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          As a general rule, Tesla owners [teslamotorsclub.com] tend to put as many or more miles on them per year as the national average.

        • I wonder how many of them *travel* with their EV?

          My guess is all of them? I mean You can literally travel all through the Scandinavian countries on pure EV using only Tesla superchargers and they aren't even the most common charging methods around up there.

          We just spent Christmas up at the arctic ocean. While passing Setermoen I couldn't help but notice two Teslas at the supercharger. Now given less than 10% of the only 5million people in Norway inhabit the top 2/3rds of the country, and that Setermoen's population is only a tad over 2000 people like most

          • I dunno, it just seems all highly inconvenient to me. I hope for your sake those Supercharger stations are places you actually want to be.
      • Probably the biggest reason Norway is in front is that their per-capita incomes are so high

        Yeah, but they have high tax rates to match (personal income taxes are over 50%). That's another big reason why Norway can afford this kind of largesse.

    • They also only talk about percentage, not absolute numbers. The article does mention that Norway only has a population of 5.3 million though.

      This [countryeconomy.com] shows they Norway only has a market for about 200k vehicles per year.

      The US market is about 17600k vehicles per year for comparison. This [fleetcarma.com] suggests that the US has almost 200k electric vehicles a year sold - so a greater total number than Norway.

      So I guess the US is not doing too bad in aggregate, even without crazy subsidies, but we're doing really poorly as a

      • Looks like Sweden and Finland are trying to create demand for electric vehicles. The combined population of those two countries is ~15 million. This would be great for increasing demand for batteries that work well in cold weather.
        • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

          Except that's 15M people in places that have car ownership on par with places like New York City. It's not really much of an opportunity to drive demand.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      An alternative solution would be to charge people what their internal combustion engine costs and let the market decide between ICE and electric. Then you could let the market decide the right mix of ICE and electric vehicles.

      The thing is people would never stand for paying the true cost of their ICE vehicles.

    • Well, OK ... if you basically paid me to own one, I'd probably have one too.

      This is true, but once you get started, you might find that you actually like or even love electric cars. I got a 3 year lease on a Nissan Leaf to use as a daily commute to work car (over 40 miles in total for going to work and coming back). I loved having an electric car. It cost me about $1 a day in electricity to drive it. My friends loved riding in the car and my (at the time) girlfriend loved riding in it too. I have relatives I need to see who moved away and unfortunately my other car basically d

  • "Norway exempts new electric cars from almost all taxes and grants perks that can be worth thousands of dollars a year in terms of free or subsidized parking, re-charging and use of toll roads, ferries and tunnels."

    • by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @11:46AM (#55855591)
      The "free market" doesn't take into account externalities, such as pollution, so I'm glad that it's NOT a "free market" decision.
      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        > The "free market" doesn't take into account externalities, such as pollution, so I'm glad that it's NOT a "free market" decision.

        What makes you think the externalities are dealt with? You're just kidding yourself that there are none. It's not in your face somewhere you can see it so you don't think it exists.

        Besides, Europeans already tax the fuel like crazy. Even if you leave the car itself out of it, you still have a means to directly charge for the relevant "externality".

    • There's no such thing as a free market decision then. Every industry has at some point or another been the subject of some form of government subsidy or tax barrier against it.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @11:45AM (#55855585)
    Since hybrid cars still use fossil fuels, they should start subsidizing electric cars to eliminate hybrids.
    • Since hybrid cars still use fossil fuels, they should start subsidizing electric cars to eliminate hybrids.

      Better idea: Let's use meaningful policies to drive economic change rather than unrealistic stretch goals that kneecap the industry before it even starts.

  • My understanding is that Norway has a 25% tax on new petrol cars. Also taxes on petrol are quite high. I'm pretty green but, at this point, I'm not sure tax incentives to promote hybrids / BEVs make sense. The reality is that a high-end pure electric vehicle is way more fun to drive than one powered by gasoline. A 4 cylinder supercharged engine combined with an electric motor is a much *better* vehicle than a V8. But both are (tens of) thousands of dollars more expensive than a basic gasoline counterpa
    • by hipp5 ( 1635263 )

      It's not clear that the current incentives will lead to the price gap closing.

      The price gap is quite clearly on the road to closing. Battery costs are plummeting. To date the drop in battery costs has been used to produce BEVs with greater range at the same price as older models with shorter range. But now that ranges are reaching the point where they are adequate for most people, manufacturers will instead start using savings on battery cost to drop the price of future models compared to today's models.

    • " But both are (tens of) thousands of dollars more expensive than a basic gasoline counterpart. "

      Only if you ignore the billions of subsidies for the oil industry.
      Some countries even conduct wars costing trillions to secure the fuel for those gasoline cars.
      Since car owners are also taxpayers, they pay for those too, even those having only electric vehicles.

      • Right, so this doesn't factor into what type of vehicle they buy. Those costs really ought to be reflected in the petrol price. In the case of Norway, though, they have plenty of fossil fuels of their own so really don't incur this cost. But they still tax gasoline very highly. And yet the economics of hybrids aren't working out without additional subsidies. Another poster has commented that the incremental costs of hybrid / BEV are closing and that's good news.
  • is around 70k [google.com]. This isn't surprising. They've got the money to afford it. Meanwhile in the States the average age of a car is over 10 years [google.com]
  • so, electric not competitive

    have to steal from working people with less income to afford one

    nice

    • by Ksevio ( 865461 )
      Sounds like you need to read up on how taxes and government work
      • yes, special interests with lawmakers in their pockets get laws passed to benefit the few at the expense of the many. This is called corporate fascism; it's not new and it's not good.

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @12:29PM (#55855959) Journal

    ...that Norway is NOT ONLY a fabulously wealthy petro-state, but far more prudent about what they do with the funds than other oil-rich countries.

    Using them as an example of anything in terms of social policies is hardly exportable to most other country's circumstances.

    • Using them as an example of anything in terms of social policies is hardly exportable to most other country's circumstances.
      Of course it is!
      The other countries would be exactly the same as Norway if they had done the same politics Norway did after WWII.
      But alas ... the bad evil communists ...

    • Yes, most other Petro states are happy to just keep the ruling class in hookers and blow. Hard to imagine them being socially responsible.

  • "Norway exempts new electric cars from almost all taxes and grants perks that can be worth thousands of dollars a year in terms of free or subsidized parking, re-charging and use of toll roads, ferries and tunnels."

    EV and hybrid cars must be pretty unpopular if they need so many incentives to induce sales.

  • The cold and snow in the area. I grew up on a farm 10 miles from town in northern Wisconsin. Winter was tough at times. And cold does affect battery life and batteries in general.
    It is one thing to use an electric car in southern California. Use one 10 miles from town, in 6 inches of snow in near/sub zero temps, spinning out, etc.
    Also, if I need to pay 60k+, I will lean toward a Large, Gas Powered, 4 wheel drive, SUV.
    But then, I am older and could be set in my ways and maybe don't see the light ;)

    Just
    • by hipp5 ( 1635263 )

      From what I've heard from Tesla Model S drivers, they're actually great winter cars. They're on the heavy end of the scale, with a low centre of mass. Plus all but the cheapest versions have 4WD, each powered by their own electric motor (which the computer can control as necessary to maintain traction). Add in the torque characteristics of the electric motors and you're golden.

      Cold can affect batteries, but Tesla has great battery management with active heating and cooling as necessary. You're gonna lose so

  • In other words, if you want a conventional car/truck you go to Germany and bring it back as a used vehicle instead of buying a new one in Norway.
  • "For the first time we have a fossil-fuel market share below 50 percent."

    Note that statement, which refers to new cars SALES. It does NOT refer to the total number of vehicles on the road.

    Hell, the USA could brag that EV sales are up 86% over last year's numbers (ok, the year before last, since we don't have numbers for '18 yet). That's even better than Norway's growth rate (40% last year, 52% this year is only a 30% growth rate). Neither number (Norway's or our's) means a hill of beans without some ind

    • by hipp5 ( 1635263 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @03:58PM (#55857639)

      Well you're never going to get to a significant fraction of the cars on the road being EV without a significant fraction of sales being EV. Usable EVs have only been around for a couple of years. Even if 100% of sales had been EV from the day they were released, it would be a while before they represented the majority of cars on the road.

      But what this news does suggest is that we're starting to enter the era of runaway EV adoption, and I imagine my 2-year-old daughter will never drive an ICE (if she even drives a car at all).

      There is also some speculation that--despite the usual "lifespan" of an ICE car--the transition could actually happen much faster than most people expect. That's because once a critical mass of cars are EV, you lose the infrastructure (gas stations, engine shops) that support ICE cars, driving ever more rapid adoption of EVs. It happened with the conversion of cameras from film to digital. People who bought expensive film cameras and planned to keep them for a decade or more quickly changed their tune once the critical mass of digital was reached and all the film developers started shutting down.

  • by tomxor ( 2379126 ) on Wednesday January 03, 2018 @02:45PM (#55857063)
    I don't care about the "free market" or "net energy exporter" arguments, the important thing is that Norway has contributed substantially to electric car sales... This in turn will help accelerate technological improvements and drive cost down through mass production. That is the key catalyst that is needed to make turn a "viable technology" into a widely available and affordable technology.

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