- Analysis reveals UK has only 15% of the charging points it
needs to meet net zero – as Labour warns of two-tier transport
Britain unless Government changes course
Labour has warned of a gulf emerging between those who can access
the benefits of the transition to electric vehicles and those who
will be locked out - because of the patchy access to charging
points across the country and the upfront price of vehicles. The
warning comes following new analysis from Labour that shows the
UK has only 15% of the charging points the Government’s own
climate advisers have said will be needed by 2025 to meet the
country’s climate targets.
It is currently far more difficult to drive an electric car in
the North and Midlands than it is in London or the South because
of the serious disparity in the number of charging points. The
latest official figures show you are currently four times more
likely to find a charging point in London than in Yorkshire.
According to the Committee on Climate Change, there need to be
around 150,000 public charge points operating in our country by
2025 and these should be “widely available across the UK”. The
Government is currently trailing way behind at only 22,790 public
charging points – meaning more than 127,000 must be installed in
just the next few years.
Labour has welcomed the Government’s ban on the sale of new
petrol and diesel cars from 2030, but is ringing the alarm about
their failure to outline how they will support Britain's car
industry, and make electric vehicles affordable for all. Having
recently cut subsidies for zero emission vehicles, the
Government’s approach risks creating a ‘two-tier transport
Britain’ and pricing some families out of car ownership.
Labour’s plan would support people across the country to make the
switch to electric, aiding the country’s transition to net zero.
-
Make electric vehicle ownership affordable by
offering long-term interest-free loans for new and used
electric vehicles to those on low to middle incomes to remove
the upfront cost barrier; and trialling a national scrappage
scheme
-
Make it easier for people to drive an electric
vehicle, wherever they live, by accelerating the
roll-out of charging points on streets and targeting areas left
out like Yorkshire, the North West and the West Midlands
Under Labour, delivering charge points would be treated as a
national infrastructure project, led by central government
through our National Infrastructure Bank and working with local
authorities.
Labour has pledged to back Britain’s car manufacturing industry
with an industrial strategy for the sector. The Party would
create jobs by part-financing the creation of three new,
additional gigafactories by 2025, providing greater security for
the sector and shoring up Britain’s global leadership in the
electric vehicle market.
MP, Labour’s Shadow Business Secretary, speaking
ahead of an address to the SMMT conference, said:
"It's right to be setting 2030 as the phase-out date for new
petrol and diesel cars but government is just not providing the
support, strategy and leadership to make this transition the
boost for jobs it should be and fair for consumers.
"As we saw with the Climate Change Committee's devastating report
last week, this is yet another example where government rhetoric
is simply not matched by action and delivery.
"The Government's failure to roll out charging points across the
country and the decision to cut the plug-in grant risks baking in
unfairness in our country as we move towards a zero emission
future.
"For the minicab driver who relies on their car for work and is
thinking the price of an electric car is simply out of their
reach. For the commuter who relies on their car but is also
worried about being priced out. For those in rural areas, the
Midlands and the North where you may not be able to access a
charging point.
"Government needs to step up and support new gigafactories,
provide the means for consumers on lower and middle-incomes to
afford electric vehicles and ensure the charging points are there
throughout our country."
And he will say at the Conference:
"My message to the automotive industry as Labour’s Shadow
Business Secretary is this:
--- that in me, you will always have a champion for this industry
and the contribution it makes to Britain;
---that I firmly believe that, if Government and industry works
together, we can secure the sector's future as a global leader;
---- and that in order to achieve this, a Labour Government would
support our automotive manufacturers with a comprehensive
industrial strategy.
Ends
Notes to Editors
- The Committee on Climate Change said in its Progress Report last
week:
-
- “A coordinated national strategy for charging
infrastructure is needed, to ensure that provision is
sufficient and appropriate across all regions of the country
and that deployment is meeting the needs of the consumers who
rely on public charging (in particular those without private
off-street parking).”
- One of the report’s priority recommendations is that the
Government should aim for there to be around 150,000 public
charge points operating by 2025. These should be widely available
across all regions of the UK.
- According to the latest figures from the DfT, as of 1 April
2021 there were 22,790 public electric vehicle charging devices
available in the UK.