Electric vehicle sales are expected to hit a record 9% of all passenger vehicles in the U.S. this year, according to Atlas Public Policy. That will be up from 7.3% of new car sales in 2022.

It will be the first time more than 1 million EVs are sold in the U.S. in one calendar year, probably reaching between 1.3 million and 1.4 million cars, the research firm predicts.

Although the numbers show significant progress for electrification, the nation is lagging behind countries like China, Germany and Norway.

EVs reached 33% of sales in China, 35% in Germany, and 90% in Norway for the first six months of 2023, according to a BloombergNEF EV outlook published in June. These figures include both battery electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid EVs.

  • nexusband@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Yeah, to put that in to context for Germany, sales are still generally down compared to before Corona. By a lot. 2.496.373 Cars for 2023, 3.058.011 Cars for 2019, that’s 22% less new Cars generally. There’s also the fact that some people are still waiting for their cars. Two colleagues of mine ordered last year…they still haven’t gotten their car. Both didn’t order BEVs though. Another colleague bought out the lease on his and is going to drive it until the wheels fall off (or, like we say in Germany “Bis das der TÜV uns scheidet”, meaning until it’s not economical any more to keep it road worthy), which is also something two of my friends did, simply because there isn’t anything on the market right now that they want.

    So yeah, from my personal surroundings, i don’t think it’s going to grow that much more.