Moved by Baroness Parminter That this House takes note of the
Report from the Environment and Climate Change Committee EV
strategy: rapid recharge needed (1st Report, Session 2023-24, HL
Paper 51). Baroness Parminter (LD) My Lords, it gives me great
pleasure as the past chair of the Lords Select Committee on
Environment and Climate Change to open this debate on electric
vehicles. While recognising that the transition to EVs is only one
part of the necessary...Request free
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Moved by
That this House takes note of the Report from the Environment and
Climate Change Committee EV strategy: rapid recharge needed (1st
Report, Session 2023-24, HL Paper 51).
(LD)
My Lords, it gives me great pleasure as the past chair of the
Lords Select Committee on Environment and Climate Change to open
this debate on electric vehicles. While recognising that the
transition to EVs is only one part of the necessary broader
transport transition that this country has to make, it is an
incredibly important part. Passenger cars account for over half
of our surface transport emissions and contribute to the almost
30,000 deaths from air pollution annually in the UK.
It is really important and, as the independent Climate Change
Committee said, it is one of the most important actions if we are
going to get to net zero. Given that electric vehicles account
for only 3% of cars on British roads at the moment, it is an
urgent priority. We know it is not going to be easy.
ICEs—internal combustion engines—have dominated our roads and
popular culture for over 100 years. Even though I am an EV driver
and I know that they are clean, quiet and great to drive, it will
be a big challenge to bring the British public away from petrol
and diesel and into electric vehicles. It will require planning,
co-ordination and an awful lot of leadership from the
Government.
It was right for our committee to look into the record of the
last Government in terms of their approach and success in getting
people out of petrol and diesel cars and into electric vehicles.
We identified that there had been some progress—certainly there
has been an increase in charge point infrastructure, and
legislation to ban new petrol and diesel cars from 2035. These
were important steps, but overall our committee concluded that an
urgent recharge was needed in the Government's strategy for
EVs.
That was, of course, when we reported in February, so it was
under the previous Government. It has to be said that, since the
new Labour Government have come in, they have hardly put their
foot to the floor in terms of delivering on the EV agenda,
despite the fact that there were some incredibly welcome
proposals both in Labour's automotive sector plan last year and
in the general election manifesto. So it is timely to have this
debate today, because the recommendations we made in February are
still relevant and, with the upcoming Budget, now is the time to
make those strides to bring people with us on the EV transition
that is so necessary.
The first thing we identified as a committee is that we are not
going to bring the British public with us unless they know where
they will be able to charge their electric vehicles. As I said,
we identified some progress—when the Minister came before our
committee last November, there were 57,000 public charging
points; that has now gone up to 70,000. So progress is being
made. Indeed, when EVA England did a survey of electric vehicle
drivers earlier this month, it identified that two-thirds of EV
drivers think that in the last year there has been a big
increase—a big improvement—in the public charging point
infrastructure. But, as more cars come onto the road, we will
need more charge points.
The Government set themselves an advisory target of 300,000
public charge points by 2030. When the Society of Motor
Manufacturers and Traders came before the committee, it said that
we needed over 2 million charge points by 2030—so we really have
to motor on with getting more charge points installed. That is
why we as a committee said that the Government needed to mandate
local authorities where there are black holes—and there are black
holes around our country—to prepare EV strategies to ensure that
we are getting the EV infrastructure where we need it.
We also called on the Government to extend the LEVI fund—the
local electric vehicle infrastructure fund—which is funding
capacity building within councils and providing direct subsidies
for charge points. Both those things were, we felt, critical. I
hope that in summing up the Minister will say what his current
thinking is, particularly on extending the LEVI fund. That is a
particularly important part of where we need to be.
As I said, there were some incredibly welcome comments about the
transition to EVs and the need to accelerate the rollout of
charge points in Labour's manifesto. Indeed, it picked up some of
the recommendations in our committee report, including removing
some of the planning barriers that are stopping charge points
being introduced. I ask the Minister, when will we see the
consultation on the permitted development rights for charge
points? I think this is an issue that the noble Lord, , may wish to come back to in a
moment. Also, are the Government minded to agree that renters
need to be given a right to charge? It is quite clear that some
landlords are blocking renters installing charge point
infrastructure.
Finally in that area, the other thing that we were very clear on
is the totemic issue of charge points in motorway service
stations. We know that people will not buy an electric vehicle if
they do not feel confident that there will be charge points at
motorway service stations when they take the family away to see
relatives at Christmas. The previous Government set and failed to
meet their target for six high-powered charge points at all
motorway service stations. This Government need to be very clear
in saying when they will be able to meet that really iconic issue
of charge points in motorway service stations.
Of course, it is not just where you are going to charge your EV
that is an issue for the public. One of the other issues that we
found was a real barrier for people was the upfront costs of
electric vehicles. EVs are still not affordable enough for all
people who need to have a car. They are more expensive than their
petrol and diesel counterparts and there are not yet enough
affordable models on the market. We looked at examples across
other European countries that are starting to move away from
early adopters into mass saturation markets. All of them have
retained fiscal incentives, normally grants, to encourage people
with the upfront costs of EVs. Sadly, the last Government got rid
of those grants back in 2022 and we as a committee felt that that
may be one of the reasons why EVs are still only 17% of new car
sales in this country. We need to do better.
It is not just the upfront costs of cars that we found to be an
issue; it is also the ongoing running costs. The biggest concern
that I had—I say that, knowing I speak merely as a representative
of the broader committee—is that, as someone with off-street
parking, I can charge my EV and it costs me 5% in VAT. Anyone who
does not have home charging has to pay 20%. The committee
identified that up to 40% of the population does not have access
to off-street parking and, therefore, the ability to get that
cheaper rate of VAT for charging. That is not equitable and I
would hope that a new Government—a new Labour Government—would
see both the issue of equality as well as the impact on the
ongoing running costs for cars.
Committee members will know that we conducted an inquiry a couple
of years back on mobilising behaviour change for net zero and the
environment. One of the things we found was that people really
wanted to get towards net zero, but they wanted the decisions and
the policy actions to get there to be fair. Having VAT at a
differential rate if you do not have the advantage of owning your
own home and your own parking space is not fair. Our committee
made it very clear, following the almost unanimous evidence that
we had from people, that the VAT rate should be equalised and
that fiscal policy should follow net-zero policy. So I hope that
the Government will look at that issue in the upcoming Budget.
The Minister may also wish to comment on the need for fiscal
incentives when buying EVs.
But it is not just charging and upfront costs. The third big
barrier the committee identified was the need to give people
clear information. This is a really big societal change, yet the
information for people about EVs—the benefits to them and to
society—just is not there. If you looked in the papers, you would
not know that nine out of 10 EV owners would not go back to
petrol or diesel, or that the lifetime costs of an EV are
currently cheaper than for petrol and diesel. What the committee
found was a blatant amount of misinformation. Very interestingly,
we looked at a number of the broadsheets and other media outlets
and found an awful lot of focus on the fire risks of electric
vehicles, so we went away and looked into the evidence. They are
no more of a fire risk than petrol and diesel cars—so we
concluded that there was a blatant campaign of
misinformation.
When we launched our campaign in February, a number of the
newspapers, including the Daily Telegraph, again showed their
fossil fuel-soaked colours. , the then Minister, came
before the committee. We asked him whether there was a concerted
campaign of misinformation, and he agreed with us. He said that
there was—it was just that the Government were not going to do
anything about it. In fact, not only did they not do anything
about it, when they pushed the date of the ban on new ICE cars
back from 2030 to 2035, the message the public got was that going
to EVs was not a priority and that we can afford to wait, whereas
they should have been clear with people that this is an urgent
priority. Indeed, the then Prime Minister went further: when he made
that announcement, he said that going to net zero was going to be
hard.
We cannot get to net zero without EVs, and we need our Government
to face down people who do not believe in net zero. We may not
have a Conservative Government, but we certainly have Reform UK
down the other end who see this as a rallying cry, and there are
siren voices in this House and beyond who need to be called out.
The Government need to take every opportunity they have—they have
one coming up in the Budget in a couple of weeks—to make it clear
to the public that they are on this journey and they are going to
support people on it and make some critical interventions,
including the equalisation of VAT and a clear statement on not
watering down the ZEV mandate, so that people know where they
stand and the direction of travel. As our committee said, that
should be allied with a 10-year road map which gives car
companies policy certainty, investors the confidence to invest
and people the information they need.
I am going to stop fairly shortly, but our report covers many
other issues, including the need for better recycling facilities
for batteries, battery health checks and, critically,
decarbonising the grid so that the electricity cars use helps us
move towards net zero. I am relying on the many of members of the
committee I see in the Chamber today to pick up one or two of
those issues. I thank them for their support today and, indeed,
throughout the committee. It was a great privilege to chair it. I
also thank the staff for producing the report.
I also thank the six schools and colleges which supported us in
our youth engagement programme and gave us their wisdom, thoughts
and reflections on this issue, which is going to be as much about
their future as it is for some of us. I put on record my thanks
to Boroughmuir High School in Edinburgh, Loreto Sixth Form
College in Greater Manchester, Barnsley College, Langley College
in Slough, the London School of Excellence and St Louise's
Comprehensive College in Belfast. They were a great support to us
all.
Finally, I hope the Minister, who will be listening to all the
comments noble Lords make this afternoon, will be able to make it
clear that this Government are committed to a fast track to EVs.
We cannot get to net zero without it. Our report was very clear:
an urgent recharge of the EV strategy is needed, and we need to
make sure that we go in the fast lane to net zero in electric
vehicles.4.13pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I warmly welcome the report, which deals statistically
with a large number of important elements, not least the rapid
recharge, which has just been mentioned. Knowing our industry as
I do, there should already be a minimum of 50 kilowatts, with a
minimum of 100 kilowatts on trunk roads.
Electric charging is expensive. VAT needs to drop from the
present 20% to 5% to give people a chance, and it should cost the
same to charge on the streets as it does in your driveway. If we
are to sell more electric vehicles, the road tax needs to be
reduced, and the issue of charge points, which has just been
mentioned, needs to be addressed too.
However, I am going to concentrate on manufacturing EVs and the
financial penalties which put an unsustainable pressure on
manufacturers. For a successful transition, we need to review the
present inflexible approach, developed by the civil servants who
produced the zero emission vehicles mandate. This was designed
when we had a growing economy, interest rates were low—as was the
cost of finance—and sales were picking up, which was hoped would
lead to lower costs for manufacturing batteries and other
things.
However, that is not the case now. The market has collapsed,
apart from fleet sales, so we need incentives, both to build and
to buy. The ZEV mandate requires manufacturers to sell a
percentage of new EVs each year from 2024. It starts this year at
22% and progresses, hitting 80% in 2030. The mandate therefore
means that if 22% of your total UK sales are not electric
vehicles, for every non-EV vehicle sold up to the target number
you will be fined—£15,000 per car. It is ridiculous.
Presently, the industry is falling short of its quotas: by about
4%, which equals—wait for it—£1.4 billion in fines. Companies are
already subsidising each electric vehicle by about £6,000 to get
sales, which means extra costs of £2 billion on top of the £1.4
billion in fines. It is simply unsustainable for our
industry.
Ironically, fines of £15,000 per vehicle under the target can be
offset by purchasing credits from those who have exceeded their
targets, which can be only the Chinese or Tesla. Either way, the
money will not be there for jobs or investment. The idea of UK
manufacturers paying the Chinese or the Americans billions in
credits is a nonsense and, I suggest, political suicide in
automotive constituencies across the country.
The answer is two-fold. First, there needs to be a VAT reduction
and equalisation of VAT on public and private charging, and the
VED extra tax on expensive car purchases—unfortunately, electric
vehicles are expensive at the moment—needs to be scrapped.
Secondly, we need a ZEV mandate adjustment, including using
2024's figures as a reset mechanism to assess the actual market
for EVs, and to adjust the trajectory to 2030 accordingly.
We should include EV exports from the UK and commercial vehicle
EV sales within the credits. The two Vauxhall plants in the UK,
which make only vans, are caught up in this quotas turmoil. Let
us be clear: these plants, which the last Government put money
into, are at serious risk of being closed if the credits are not
sorted out.
Another measure that would be the right way forward would be to
allow pre-2024 EV sales in this year's first quotas, and
UK-manufactured vehicles should get additional credits,
recognising that there are no “distribution emissions” or the
environmental cost of shipping vehicles from as far away as
China, the US and Korea. It makes sense. Indeed, the French have
already done this. Why cannot we? The US also does this, and it
better reflects actual emissions in the sale by including the
emissions to get it there in the first place. The US states with
ZEV legislation also give up to four credits for “local” built
vehicles—again, why can we not do that?
We really need to pause while all this is sorted out, and
flexibilities in the system to recognise the reality of the
market for EVs right now. We also need time for any changes to
bed in and feed into the marketplace. There is an awful lot to be
done, but the good news is that our manufacturers, in the main,
are prepared for 2030. But incentives to grow the market and help
manufacturers and the infrastructure, which has been mentioned,
must be put in place in a timely fashion, alongside the
much-needed infrastructure improvements outlined in this
tremendous report.
4.19pm
(Con)
My Lords, it was a great privilege to serve on the committee
under the noble Baroness, Lady Parminter. Like her, I am no
longer in it. Her departure is greatly missed; I suspect that
mine, since I was the grit in the oyster on that committee, was
much welcomed by its other members. It is also a privilege to
follow the noble Lord, . He made some important
points, which I hope I will be able to suggest—probably to other
people's surprise—are not quite as much of a worry as he
suggested.
One of the problems with most Select Committee reports is that
they tend to be all words and no numbers. Committees show an
extreme reluctance to discuss the costs of their proposals to the
taxpayer or the consumer. I was originally trained as a
scientist; drilled into us was Lord Kelvin's remark:
“When you can measure what you are speaking about, and express it
in numbers, you know something about it. When you cannot express
it in numbers, your knowledge is of a meagre and unsatisfactory
kind”.
It may be the beginning of knowledge, but you have scarcely in
your thoughts advanced to the stage of science. That is even more
true in economics. If you cannot even estimate the costs or
benefits of a policy, you can scarcely claim to have advanced to
the stage where you can make policy recommendations.
Happily, this report is not devoid of numbers, albeit that most
of the important ones are well hidden and the obvious conclusions
that might be drawn from them have not always been drawn. I will
focus on some of the key numbers in this report, but none of them
appear in the initial recommendations. The upfront conclusions on
page 4 use all sorts of euphemisms and verbal circumlocutions to
avoid mentioning that they will cost money.
Perhaps I might translate what the report actually says. The
first recommendation is:
“Tackle the disparity in upfront costs between electric and
petrol and diesel cars”.
That means subsidising or, as the noble Lord, , remarked, penalising the
sale of petrol and diesel cars. The second recommendation is:
“Turbo-charge the charging infrastructure rollout”.
That means subsidise it. The third is:
“Ensure charging is reasonably priced, convenient, and
reliable”.
That means subsidising fuel costs further. The report goes on to
say that
“the Government must explore options for equalising the
discrepancy between the VAT rates for domestic and public
charging”.
Now there is no conceivable likelihood that the Government will
put up VAT on domestic electricity, so that is a call for VAT on
public charging points to be reduced, further increasing the
subsidy on fuel costs for electric vehicles. I will return to the
important fifth point later, but the sixth point is:
“Enhance UK manufacturing and battery innovation”.
That means more subsidies. The seventh is “Invest in UK
recycling”—a new area for government subsidies. And so it goes
on.
The problem is that the existing level of subsidies is very high,
before we add to them from any of the proposals in this report.
You have to get to page 33 or 34 to find out how much the
subsidies are. They reveal that a privately owned EV is already
subsidised, relative to petrol cars, to the tune of £5,000 over
10 years—it actually says £5,000 on page 34 and €5,000 on page
33, but I think the former is correct. However, corporately owned
vehicles are subsidised to the tune of £10,000 in just four
years. Those are big subsidies, particularly the latter. No
wonder the vast majority of sales are to company fleets. If we
are to subsidise EVs, it baffles me why the bulk of the money
should go to those owned by companies—but so it is.
The main subsidy for private vehicles is, of course, the fact
that they pay no duty on their fuel, which is electricity. You
have to reach page 36 to find the total costs of this as EVs
gradually replace fossil-fuel vehicles. The OBR has pointed out
that fuel duties raised £23.4 billion last year, equivalent to
£867 per household. That means that, if we forge ahead and
succeed in phasing out those vehicles by 2030, we will have
created what we might call a black hole in the nation's finances,
heading towards £23 billion as older vehicles are retired and
used less.
The committee mentions the important issue of road tax in its
fifth recommendation. It simply says that we should:
“Begin an urgent review of road taxation”.
It calls for an honest conversation with the public—quite right.
Sadly, the committee did not agree to initiate this honest
conversation by honestly admitting that the only option to
replace this revenue is to introduce road charging. If we in this
House, who do not have to get re-elected, do not have the courage
to be honest enough to say that we are going to have to introduce
road charging to replace fuel duty, how can we expect the people
in the other House, who do have to get re-elected, to broach the
subject until that black hole in the public finances is upon
us?
The penultimate figure from the report is highly relevant to the
decision on whether to phase out the sale of non-EVs sooner or
later. There was much criticism of the previous Prime Minister's
decision to postpone the date beyond which sales of fossil fuel
cars would be banned—delaying it from 2030 to 2035. There is
rather less criticism now. The car companies seem rather relieved
he did that, since sales are slower than was anticipated. We were
told by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders—which is
of course largely a society of traders, and largely represents
foreign companies exporting cars to this country—that this had a
damaging effect on British manufacturers, who would not have the
incentive to develop EVs. However, this ignores the strange
nature of the British car market.
We export the overwhelming majority, more than 80%, of the cars
we manufacture, and more than 80% of the cars we consume are
imported. Indeed, on page 22 of the report you will discover that
no less than 97% of the electric vehicles sold in the UK in the
last quarter were imported. Most of the EVs produced in this
country are presumably exported. So these changing rules only
really have a major effect on EVs and other vehicles sold in the
UK. Given that 80% of our vehicles are exported, the effect of
these rules on our production falls on only one-fifth of the
production, 20%. They are mainly affected by the rules of the
countries to which they export, so I hope the damage that it does
to British manufacturing will be less than the noble Lord, , fears.
I am reasonably sure that electric vehicles will, eventually,
displace petrol and diesel cars without subsidy, when their
upfront price comes down to equal that of petrol and diesel cars,
when the range of batteries is sufficient so that a normal
journey would never require recharging, and when recharging is
rapid. Actually, recharging is probably less of an issue than we
imagine in this report. For the 60% of people who can keep cars
off-road, the normal thing they will do after they use their car
and come home is plug it in. The next morning it will be charged.
They will not have to stop at the gas station as they would in a
petrol car because they will have a fully charged car—so it is
actually better. But for the 40% who do not have off-road
parking, there is a problem we did not really find a solution
to.
When will the price of electric vehicles come down to that of
petrol and diesel? In the report, we quote people as saying
that
“Other predictions for when average EV prices will meet those of
petrol and diesel vehicles range from 2025–27”,
so, apparently, it will be quite imminent. So why are we
subsidising people to buy expensive vehicles when they could have
them at more or less the same price as the alternatives in a
couple of years' time? It is forecast that, by 2025, the price
would be down to about £21,000 for an EV in Europe. Actually, you
can get one for £22,000 now in the UK, so they are coming down to
a similar price.
We should remember Dieter Helm, the great energy expert, who was
asked by the Government to analyse their energy policy. He
concluded that the big failure was that we had invested in
immature technologies. He said that investing in
technologies—which were going to become mature and cheap—when
they were still immature and expensive had probably cost us the
best part of £100 billion. So why are we encouraging people to do
that in the EV market?
I suggest that we should look at this report and the figures, and
draw conclusions from them. We might be a little more optimistic
than some of the pessimists and a little more realistic than some
of the super-optimists.
4.30pm
(CB)
My Lords, I congratulate the noble Baroness, Lady Parminter, on
her commanding introduction, and I congratulate the committee on
producing a truly comprehensive report of real ambition. My only
criticism is that it is far too polite. The committee strictly
identifies the gulf between aspiration and delivery thus far on
our journey to net zero, and it offers no hope that, on current
trends, we are even remotely on course to meet our long-term
targets for decarbonising road transport. Decarbonising and
expanding the production of electricity, decarbonising the
heating of our homes and buildings, and decarbonising road
transport must be our prime goals if we are to play our part in
reducing the impact of climate change.
Today, only one in 30 of the vehicles on our roads is an EV, with
annual sales of new EVs apparently flattening at around 16% of
the total. I am an EV owner, and it is easy to see why take-up
has been so slow—the committee's report evidences this well.
First, although the lifetime cost of owning an EV is economic,
EVs are more expensive to buy up front than petrol and diesel
vehicles. Will the new Government seek more ways to incentivise
EV purchase and increasingly to disincentivise the purchase of
vehicles powered by petrol and diesel?
The second factor inhibiting take-up is that, on the move over
longer distances, the charging experience is infinitely less
convenient than buying petrol. I am a member of the APPG on EVs,
and we were told by a leading motorway service provider that one
major motorway service station has no charge points at all. One
station has installed charge points, but they are not in service
because an adequate grid connection cannot be obtained for some
years still to come. He told us that, in busy periods, he has to
deploy stewards to avert fights breaking out on charge point
queues. Only 63% of motorway service stations have over six
charge points, and only around 40% have six or more rapid
chargers. In the whole of the UK, there are fewer than 4,000
ultra-rapid charge points. Will this Government ensure that
motorway service stations up their game and that grid connections
to charge points used by long-distance drivers will be
prioritised?
The third reason for the low take-up of EVs is that there is huge
variation across the country in the availability of public charge
points. The EV APPG was told that 80% of UK public charge points
are in London and the south-east. I see from the committee's
report that there are over 100 times more charge points per head
of population in Hammersmith and Fulham than in the Wirral, west
of the Mersey. Not everyone can install a charge point in their
garden at home—if you live in an apartment block or on a terraced
street, for example. Will this Government devise and implement a
plan for an appropriate rollout of public charge points right
across the UK and located conveniently to where people live and
park their cars?
The fourth reason why EV take-up is low is because the cost of
charging is highly variable. It is economic at home, of course,
cheaper than petrol, but high-speed charging is expensive. Will
this Government ensure that the daily cost of running an EV is
cheaper than a carbon-fuelled vehicle?
Finally, take-up is low because the quality of the user interface
at charge points can be completely unfit for purpose, with
under-illuminated screens in direct sunlight impossible to read,
touch pay not always available, and onerous and complex user
instructions. Touring the Inner Hebrides with my wife in the
summer, I came across a particularly lurid example: a charge
point with a blizzard—over 100 words—of user instructions; the
requirement before using it to scan a QR code and to download an
app; and a complex process of feeding back a reference number for
the individual charge point before it could be used. It was a
complete nightmare. I have a picture of that charge point on my
smartphone, if any noble Lords present would like to see it. It
is a gruesome sight. Will this Government galvanise the industry
to ensure that the process of paying to charge your EV is as
simple and convenient as buying petrol, and that all payments can
be contactless, even below 8 kilowatts?
Briefly, I want to respond to what the noble Lord, , has said. The noble Lord
graces any committee because he is always challenging. I
passionately believe that we have to achieve net zero, but I
agree that we have to find the most economic route to it. There
is far too little debate about that—but at the end of the day
there may be a price for achieving net zero. We need to make it
the minimum price, but we have to recognise that there is a
price, and it is absolutely imperative that we reach our net-zero
goals as quickly as possible.
Will this Government produce and publish a comprehensive and
granular joined-up plan for delivering net zero, as we do not
have one at the moment, including how to decarbonise transport?
Will he explain how all the many departments right across
government that need to combine to deliver an integrated plan
will be involved in that process, and how they will be tasked to
deliver? Does the Minister believe that by 2030, in six years'
time, the goal that all new cars should be EVs is achievable?
4.38pm
(GP)
My Lords, I congratulate the noble Baroness on her introduction
and her committee's work. She is the most amazing Member of our
House, and I think we have to appreciate her effort in actually
making life greener.
The Green Party wants to switch to electric vehicles to make a
real transformation in how people travel and move around. We want
the cars, alongside the electric buses and vans, to be a real
game-changer. We want all new cars to be zero emission by 2027,
with the aim of being able to remove all petrol and diesel cars
from our roads by 2035, but that means making them affordable and
having a charging point wherever people need them: so, if you are
teacher, you need one at school; if you live in terraced housing,
you need one on the street close to you; and, if you make long
trips, you need chargers at every roadside stop-off.
We have to keep this real. The fact is that electric vehicles
will not help with climate change emissions unless all those
charging points are run from renewable energy. If they are not,
we will just be transporting the pollution somewhere
else—somewhere possibly more rural, where it is even worse. We
have to do this properly. Of course, we also have to make
batteries that can last for years and years; there should be no
throwaway culture when it comes to batteries. Electric vehicles
will not completely cut roadside pollution. They will not, for
example, cut the particulates coming off tyres and brakes, which
is quite a big factor in air pollution. Electric vehicles will
not stop congestion or cut the number of people killed or injured
on our roads—the statistics are horrifying at the moment. There
are also environmental trade-offs. Building any car takes raw
materials, sometimes toxic materials, and adds to the planetary
burden that we humans create.
For those obsessed with the cost of doing this, they should
always ask: what is the cost of not doing it? The fact is that
climate change is coming at us like an express train. When we
look at what is happening in America—indeed, all over the
world—we see that the weather patterns are very different. The
hurricanes in America were exacerbated by climate change. We
could experience something similar here, so we have to move fast.
Therefore, however much this costs, we have to ask exactly how
much it will cost if we do not do it.
EVs are expensive, however. We need a well-funded scrappage
scheme along with a transport system that gives people a genuine
choice. The real solution is traffic reduction. More people on
buses, bikes and local trains means fewer cars on the road, which
means less pollution, less congestion and fewer casualties.
Instead of owning a car, many would prefer a mix of car, bus and
rail, with electric car clubs set up all over the country and
offering car use on the cheap—or relatively cheap. The transition
to electric vehicles is a real opportunity to think about how we
travel and whether we need car rental, instead of car ownership.
After all, people now download or stream, rather than own things.
It is time, perhaps, to apply the same approach to driving. It
could happen if the Government put enough money and focus on
making car clubs convenient, cheap and reliable, but also, of
course, on public transport. I very much hope that this Labour
Government will take the issue of traffic reduction very
seriously. It is the only way forward.
4.42pm
The Lord
My Lords, I too warmly welcome this debate as a member of the
committee that produced the report. I pay tribute to the noble
Baroness, Lady Parminter, for her introduction to the debate and
her very careful, wise and gracious—and patient—leadership of the
committee in its first three years.
My experience of serving on the ECC Committee across the three
years was that each of the challenges we addressed proved to be
both more significant and more complex than we first appreciated.
It was a tremendous learning curve. Each issue had multiple
questions and problems associated with it and needed complex
solutions. That was clearly the case with the EV report before
the House today.
Some very good work has been done by the previous Government,
manufacturers and local authorities, but much more needs to be
done—and urgently—to keep this transition on track. I would
highlight that need for urgency in the transition. As the noble
Baroness, Lady Jones, has just said, the effects of climate
change across the world are accelerating, as all of us in this
Chamber recognise, often affecting those who have least, who are
least resilient and whose emissions in the present and in the
past have been lowest across the world.
Surface transport is the UK's highest emitting sector, with
passenger cars responsible for over half the sector's emissions.
The new Government surely need to do all they can to accelerate
the transition, alongside the vital transition to renewable
energy, so what do they intend to do? The Labour manifesto for
the general election mentions three key steps: accelerating the
rollout of charge points; restoring the phase-out date of 2030
for new cars with internal combustion engines; and supporting
buyers of second-hand electric cars by standardising
information—the second-hand car market is key and complex. These
are welcome steps and I ask the Minister, as others have done, to
say when we will see action on each of those points. However, as
I am sure the Minister will recognise, and as the report makes
clear, the steps are not enough by themselves, so I ask for a
response and for action on two further areas.
The first, echoing other noble Lords, is to ask what the
Government will do to ensure that the transition to EVs as part
of the transition to net zero is a fair transition. I commend
that word “fair” to the Government: it does not feature in this
part of the manifesto. In particular, how will the Government
ensure parity of pricing and taxation between those able to
charge their EVs at home and those who need to use a commercial
charging service? As has been said, 40% of the country will not
have access to a home charging point. There is, at present, no
viable solution to ensure parity, and I agree that our committee
was not able to offer one, but it will need some radical and
imaginative thinking. How will the Government address this key
question of fairness?
Secondly, how will the Government lead and encourage the
transition to EVs through better communication and co-ordination
across government? The committee conducted its inquiry through a
period when the Government were rowing back from previous
commitments and sending very mixed messages to the markets, to
manufacturers and to consumers. We are still waiting for a sense
of how the new Government will respond in terms of encouragement,
incentivisation, accurate information and co-ordination of policy
goals and delivery. What task force or structures will the
Government put in place to ensure this for the future? The
transition to EVs is a potential revolution in our road
transport, our economy and public health over the next decade.
How will the Government rapidly recharge this sector into the
future?
4.47pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I declare an interest as chair of the Labour Climate
and Environment Forum. I too am very honoured to have served on
this inquiry. I am always amazed by the skill of the noble
Baroness, Lady Parminter, in chairing what was a motley crew and
her skill this afternoon in being able to name in exquisite
detail all the schools we worked with, with no notes whatever.
Doesn't it just make you spit?
Sales of new battery electric vehicles are up—I do not think we
should be excessively gloomy. They went up considerably in 2023,
but of course that was happening mainly in fleets, and private
new car demand for electric vehicles declined substantially
during that same year.
I want to deal with four of the issues that have been raised
already by noble Lords but perhaps focus on aspects that have not
yet been covered. The whole charging infrastructure is the first.
There are now 70,000 public charging points and 850,000 domestic
and workplace points, and that is still substantial growth. Some
80% of current electric vehicle owners have their own off-street
parking, so we must make sure that we do not end up with a
situation of haves and have-nots. Equalising tax on charging is
really important.
The mixed signals that we got from the previous Government about
whether it was going to be a 2030 or 2035 phase-out date did not
help the charge point operators—it undermined their prospects of
investment. We need to make sure that the clarity around the date
of the phase-out—which was in the manifesto, as the right
reverend Prelate the mentioned—is honoured and
sustained, so that everybody is very clear about the trajectory
to which we are working.
There are considerable incentives in place at the moment for
charge point installation—such as the rapid charging fund and
LEVI, which is a local authority scheme—but they have not
accelerated charge point rollout to quite the rate that we
wanted. For example, the LEVI rules keep changing, making it very
difficult for folk to deal with. There are a number of laggard
local authorities that have done nothing since the scheme was
opened, and that needs to be subject to government action. Local
authorities are key in making charge points available for people
who have not got access to driveway parking, and collaboration
between charge point operators and local authorities is
fundamental. The LEVI scheme and some of the initiatives put in
place by the last Government to make it successful need to be
continued and looked at, to make sure that they have not been
lost sight of in the transition.
The Government have been consulting on-street charging. It would
be good to know from the Minister when the results of that
consultation are likely to emerge and what is going to happen as
a result of them. There is a view that there is a need for
Section 50 licences to allow on-street charging to happen, but
these are quite expensive and very slow. Why not grant permits to
deliver on-street charging in the way that utilities have
standing permits to operate the works necessary to keep them
moving?
As the noble Lord, , indicated, the rapid charging
fund is dragging. It is only a pilot scheme so far. When it is
rolled out in full, it needs to include the provision that was in
the pilot of having HGVs included. It would be good to hear from
the Minister when the full scheme will be introduced.
There is a cross-pavement charging grant, but the guidance on how
that will operate has not yet been published. As a result, the
money that was set aside for it has literally not been utilised.
Can the Minister say what plans the Government have to take
forward the cross-pavement charging grant? To be frank, I think
that it is not a good idea. I would be much more in favour of
looking at how we can ensure that, within communities, there are
sufficient accessible charging points, so that people can be
assured that they will find one within a decent walking distance
of their house, rather than having the prospect of intrusion into
pavements by works sponsored by a grant to individuals.
The second point I want to cover is that of upfront costs. The
vast majority of people who are buying electric vehicles at the
moment are buying them through workplace or other leasing
schemes, so I am not as downcast as some previous speakers have
been. The second-hand market, which is a really important part of
the vehicle market, is struggling. That is partly because of a
lack of clarity about depreciation as a result of uncertainty
around battery health. I would be grateful if the Minister could
tell us what is happening with the support scheme for battery
assurance certificates. It has been consulted upon; when will it
come about? Could the Minister also tell us how the fairly
substantial investment that the Government have put into battery
development and initiatives such as solid-state batteries is
going?
Commercial fleet operators are key, and the upfront costs of
trucks are still very expensive—by a factor of three, compared
with diesel. The current government grant schemes are pretty
small, so perhaps we need a combination of increased grants and
tax incentives, as well as tax disincentives. Disincentivising
tax on diesel trucks will help create the market for electric
vehicles in the commercial sector.
I turn to one of the bees in my bonnet that the committee
discussed: marketing and communications. The reality is that the
climate change challenge is one of the biggest that the world has
ever faced, yet we do not have a government-co-ordinated
marketing scheme for electric vehicles to persuade the public
that some of their concerns and fears are being met and are not
as huge as they think they are, using modern marketing
techniques, social media and all those sorts of things. Under the
previous Government, we frequently had Ministers in front of the
committee who told us that that was an example of the nanny state
and that the Government did not do that.
The reality is that there needs to be a concerted campaign
against what is a big disinformation campaign. If you read local
and national newspaper reports on electric vehicles, you would
think that they are the Antichrist and liable to eat babies if
left unattended. Range anxiety is said to cause stress, but range
anxiety is rapidly becoming a non-entity. There are groundless
fears about spontaneously combusting batteries, and of battery
life and resale value. All those fears are not justified by the
evidence but the tabloids, and other far more reputable
newspapers, continue to peddle them like billy-o. The time has
come for the Government to recognise that it is important to take
forward a concerted campaign with modern marketing techniques and
good information reliably provided to the public, and that this
must not be left on some government website for the public to
have to seek out. That is long overdue.
I will finish with the ZEV mandate. I do not agree with the noble
Lord, , who is not in his place,
that the timescale should be adjusted, although I agree with him
that some of the market incentives need to be geared up. We must
not forget that it is important to bring in electric vehicles at
a greater rate not only for climate change but for the
manufacturers themselves. Increasingly, the world is looking for
electric vehicles, rather than diesel and petrol. If we are to
keep our place at all as an exporter of UK vehicles, we need to
make sure that we can meet that requirement and do not see a
diminution in the pace of moving our manufacturing capability
towards electric vehicles.
I hope that the Minister will be able to give us strong
assurances that the Government are not spooked by the
manufacturers' push-back at the mandate, and that there will be a
strong campaign for the promotion of electric vehicles and a
tweaking of the grants, taxes and other mechanisms, as noble
Lords have spoken about today. We do not want to break stride. We
need to find ways of addressing the hiccups and bumps in the road
that mean that the manufacturers are feeling uncomfortable. We
need to meet their legitimate concerns, but not by changing that
date.
The mandate is one of the biggest tools in the toolbox. Electric
vehicle sales are going up, especially in the lease market. We
are seeing heavily discounted prices, which are good for the
customer as well as for the climate. If you look at the exact
calculations for the 2024 target, which with proper adjustments
is about 18.5%, you will see that we are on target to meet it,
and therefore should not be panicking now. So let us keep up the
pace, drive down the carbon and the costs, drive more feedstock
into the second-hand market, and make a real contribution to the
huge challenge that is climate change.
No doubt the noble Lord, , would have hysterics at any
suggestion of taxation benefits or subsidy. But the reality is
that we are rapidly seeing a closure of the upfront cost between
electric and petrol vehicles, and that is as long as the subsidy
needs to persist—we are not talking about it being in place for a
very long time. We are talking about these sorts of subsidies
being time limited by the point when electric vehicles can hold
their own in that market.
I also thank the noble Lord, , for his strenuous efforts on
the committee to keep us honest. Many of his points were
absolutely admirable, but I think the point at which I parted
company from him was this: he does not believe that the costs of
not doing this are higher than the costs of doing it, and that
climate change down stream has huge costs that are now dreaded by
the reinsurance and insurance market, the banking sector and
every sensible business. Of course, if you do not believe that, a
cost now is a bogeyman, and a cost in 20 or 30 years that you do
not believe in is not worth thinking about. It was fun.
5.01pm
(Con)
My Lords, I am very grateful to the noble Baroness, Lady
Parminter, for her superb chairing of the committee; it was a
real pleasure to be part of it.
I share my noble friend Lord Lilley's aversion to subsidy. It
seems to me that subsidies that are too large and too long stop
real solutions emerging, and that we really need to work against
them. It was a huge pleasure being on the committee with him. I
learned what dissent effectively delivered with great style was,
and I learned how one can chair in such circumstances, so it was
a great educational experience.
I do not think my noble friend should despair too much about not
being on the committee any more: we have my noble friend there. I see that the current
inquiry is into methane. When I was a Whip in MAFF, the BSE
crisis hit and the first reaction of the scientists was, “We must
kill every cow in the country”. I hope, with the fate of the cows
being in my noble friend's hands, that he will mount as good a
defence as the noble Viscount, , did under those
circumstances.
There are some things the Government can do to move things along.
First, on regulations, as mentioned by the noble Baroness, Lady
Young, and others, we are faced with a set of regulations,
particularly when it comes to flats, on-street charging and
similar areas, where we are deliberately slowing things down. We
are making it harder to make progress. This is a Government who
have said, in Defra, in housing and elsewhere, that they will do
something about ineffective and unnecessary regulations. I know
how hard that is but I am optimistic; I very much hope that the
Government will go down that way.
Another area where regulations have been getting in the way is on
the evolution of small, cheap electric vehicles. If I want
something that will carry myself and a couple of kids, or maybe
the shopping around town, I can go to China and buy it for
£1,500. The cheapest alternative here is £15,000. Some of that
difference is quality but an awful lot of it is regulation. The
question of whether the value that we are getting from that
regulation justifies the cost of implementing it really needs
examining. We really ought not to be getting in the way of the
development of new forms of local mobility in the way that we
are.
I very much support what the noble Lord, , said about information. We ought
to publish an overall projection for energy and net zero. I would
not call it a plan—it is too uncertain and far away for that—but
it should be something that shows us how the Government believe
we can get there, including what the steps will be, what the
consequences will be and what the experience will be like. It
should be open, moving, discursive and, above all, truthful. That
would make a good base for good policy. The current darkness, for
which the previous Government must accept some responsibility, is
not a constructive background.
I would also like to see open information rigorously applied to
the availability and state of charging points, so that anyone can
find out the state of any charging point and where they might go
in the hope of finding it, rather than it being balkanised into
little sets of information for people who subscribe to particular
networks. I would really like to see people being able to rent
out their own home charging spaces to other people. Apart from
not having an electric car and the ability to charge it, I cannot
see why I should not be able to have someone else's car on my
drive and charge it there. The prices charged for on-street
parking are ridiculous. I could make a very nice little turn, as
I might do from selling my surplus strawberries, by selling a bit
of electricity and thereby keeping everybody's price down.
Lastly, I would like to see us pay serious attention to
resilience—getting ourselves into a position where we can
genuinely support a manufacturing industry. The key thing that I
would like to see us do is put money into battery research. We
cannot continue— it is totally impossible—to rely on the rare
materials that find their way into current batteries. We have to
do better; there are signs that we can do better. If we find
ourselves at the forefront of a really effective sodium battery
development, we will have a chance to create that industry or a
share of it here, but while we rely on old materials and rare
materials, we really must keep here the materials that get here.
We must have an effective recycling industry so that what comes
here stays here and we can use it to make new batteries.
5.08pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I will try not to repeat too much, but I repeat noble
Lords' words of appreciation to the noble Baroness, Lady
Parminter, for her introduction to this debate and her chairing
of the committee's report. It was a truly remarkable effort. I
couple with that my praise to the committee for making a
coherent, if not universally supported, report; and I praise the
staff for making sense of such a vast area of different
expertise.
There are multiple markets in this area: the company car market,
which differs from the private car market; the used car market;
the leased market; and the commercial vehicle market. They are
all different markets but, actually, the issues involved here are
much wider than that. Surface transport, and road transport
within that, makes a big contribution to our carbon emissions.
Unless we resolve that, we are not going to be anywhere near our
targets for the transition to net zero. The Minister who is about
to reply is from the net zero department and therefore has a
considerable strategic interest in this issue but, of course,
other departments— the Department for Transport and His Majesty's
Treasury—are going to make the key decisions here.
The range of topics which impinge on this go from what you can do
with a lamp-post outside your house to what are effectively
geopolitical issues—namely, what form of trade we will encourage
with China, with the transfer of technology and therefore the
cost, and possible production here, of what are in China
relatively cheap electric vehicles.
The timescale for the last propulsion switch in transport modes,
from reliance on horsepower to the internal combustion engine,
was about 40 or 50 years; we are attempting to make a very
dramatic change in six years. That requires very real focus by
the new Government on all aspects in all departments, and I join
in the call for a Statement from them at an early stage on how
they will deliver this key part of our net-zero ambition.
Incidentally, in terms of timescale, roughly 120 years ago the
main means of propulsion may have been electric. The world speed
record was held in the 1890s by an electric car. Unfortunately,
we took the wrong decision at that point, and the consequences
are still with us. We must address all aspects of the road
system, the traffic system and the taxation system, to get this
delivered.
I agree with my noble friend Lady Young on the need for
misinformation to be countered by the Government as well as the
advertising industry. That is very important. There has been a
lot of misinformation in this area. Regarding the point made by
the noble Lord, , I do not disagree that the
subsidies and encouragement have been misplaced. Where I do
disagree is that you can avoid a significant degree of taxation,
manipulation or subsidy to meet our objectives. The big
misapplication has been, as he says, that the main subsidy in
recent years has been to the company sector. That has a double
problem: it means that the pre-existing subsidies to the private
sector and individual owners of cars has been dropped, and those
need to be restored.
However, the bigger effect is the recent slowdown in the move to
electric vehicles, which has been completely dominated by the
fleet schemes and affects both ends. Within the companies, those
who switched to electric vehicles for their fleets four, five or
six years ago are now trying to sell them off on the second-hand
market, but the cars are too big and too expensive for the
second-hand market, and not the kinds of cars which most
car-owning households want. As a result, the price that the
companies get for second-hand cars is not what was forecast, and
they are therefore slowing down the take-up even of fleet cars at
this point.
Therefore, we need action on both fronts. We need to focus
largely on the markets in which individual car owners operate.
This includes second-hand and upfront costs of new cars, because
there is a virtual equalisation of a total lifetime cost already
while the upfront cost is still deeply prohibitive for a lot of
potential owners. We need to change the economics for the fleet
cars so that they produce smaller fleets and therefore solve
their problem in five or six years' time of producing cars in the
second-hand market which they can sell at a price that most car
owners will be prepared to pay. To switch the subsidy and the tax
incentive while at the same time addressing all the different
markets that are involved is quite a complex thing to do.
On top of that, we have the problem of disincentives. The biggest
disincentive to buying an electric car has been anxieties about
range. Those are gradually diminishing, but the fact remains that
the number of charge points available to that 40% or so of the
population who cannot connect their car to a charge point from
their own home means that there is a social division among people
who can afford electric cars, over and above the price
differential. It means that the cost of running an electric car
for those people who live in flats or terraced houses, or any
kind of house that fronts straight on to the street, is
substantial. The taxation differential aggravates that.
There are a lot of things that need addressing. Some are being
addressed, but most, as yet, frankly, are not. We are behind even
the targets we set ourselves for motorway stations, so those who
use their car for work and transport are faced with higher prices
than those using them for pleasure or for short-term purposes.
All these things can be addressed, but they need to be addressed
across government pretty rapidly. I would like to hear from the
Minister how, and over what timescale, we will see progress on
this front.
There are three things we decided not to tackle, but which we
will need to tackle. They are not in the report, but I hope that
some of them are at least in the new Government's strategy.
The first is the question of hybrids, and I declare an interest
as a hybrid owner. The previous Government more or less said—and
I think this is the general view—that hybrids will be phased out,
and that they are, in effect, a dead-end technology. Yet people
who bought hybrids hoped, by and large, to contribute towards
saving carbon. They at least need to have some way of
transferring into the full electric mode within the next few
years.
Secondly, we need investment in manufacturing, as my noble friend
said. I disagree with his
analysis of where the money should go, but I do not disagree with
him that we need a strategy for UK-based production. We also need
a strategy for battery production. We need more than a strategy;
we need to recognise that battery production will have to become
more sophisticated and that we will have to address in that same
context, both in the UK and worldwide, the whole question of
scarce mineral resources, the availability of lithium in
particular, and the Chinese control of large parts of the lithium
supply chain.
Finally, we will have to face the fact of how we change motor
taxation, as Norway already has as the most successful adopter of
new electric vehicles. The switch to EVs, with the failure to
raise fuel duty, has meant that the Treasury's income from motor
transport has diminished and will diminish even more drastically.
At some point, the Government will have to face the issue of how
we tax road transport in future. It might well be that the issue
of road mileage taxation comes back on to the agenda.
I remember, some 25 years ago, as a Minister in the Ministry of
Transport, we produced a worked-out plan for a partial mileage
taxation. I was quite convinced by this and went to see my old
boss, . He said, “Don't be so bloody
stupid”. I understand the politics of it, but it is no longer
stupid. We need to ensure that we have a basis for motor taxation
that meets the needs of making a major contribution towards
reducing our carbon emissions. That requires a new and
imaginative approach to road taxation.
5.19pm
The (Con)
My Lords, my noble friend referred to various members of
the committee, which was excellently chaired by the noble
Baroness, Lady Parminter. Indeed, my noble friend referred to himself as the grit
in the oyster that makes the pearl—not to worry, because he was
replaced by my noble friend . I was mildly hurt that he did
not mention me, but I am certainly not of the sort of magnitude
of those two honourable Peers—maybe the grit in the cockle. I
have just joined the Environment and Climate Change Committee for
the methane inquiry, so I was not present for the EV inquiry, but
it is something that particularly interests me. Then, when I was
just nipping out to spend a penny, I saw all the clerks, past and
present—some of them have left, thankfully. It was somewhat
intimidating that they, of course, had been involved in this
inquiry.
I declare my registered interests as a landowner and farmer in
Norfolk, where I have invested in every single form of renewable
energy under the sun except for wind. We run EVs in our business,
including mine. Before I had an electric vehicle, I had no idea
of their phenomenal acceleration.
I welcome the general direction of progress towards full
decarbonisation, but I remain sceptical about the Government's
net zero by 2050 policy. I want to talk about this aim to
accelerate grid decarbonisation and what that will do to
electricity prices and, therefore, the cost of charging an EV.
Indeed, I fear the pressure applied on the United Kingdom's
economy through this drive to achieve net zero in such a short
timeframe will have significant detrimental consequences across
multiple facets of our economy while much larger and more
polluting countries merely pay service to net zero.
This Government's aim is to decarbonise the entire electricity
grid by 2030—five years ahead of the target set by the
Conservatives and just six years on from Labour taking office.
The Secretary of State, the right honourable , says he will do this by eliminating natural
gas—currently the largest source of UK electricity—and expanding
wind and solar power. Nuclear power is also carbon free, but no
new reactors are expected to come online until 2031, so his plan
relies entirely on renewables and, as we know from bitter
experience, reliance on renewables means sky-high energy
prices.
In the 1990s, renewables accounted for 2% of Britain's
electricity. In 2022, a couple of years ago—a record year for
renewables—they produced only a third of Britain's electricity.
Electricity prices have more than doubled in the past 30 years,
leaving the UK with some of the highest in the developed world.
The shutdown of Ratcliffe-on-Soar a fortnight ago represented the
closure of Britain's last coal-fired station. In this symbolic
moment, I invite the House to reflect on the speed at which such
changes are occurring and whether we should make such
performative closures at a time when we are so far from the
destination of net zero.
My view is that our national energy policy should consist of a
huge mix of energy sources with, yes, a healthy and increasing
blend of multiple renewable options. The Secretary of State's
plans to continue the growth of the Great British Nuclear project
are particularly welcomed, as nuclear power should be a key tool
for reaching emissions targets. Additionally, we should not
neglect other energy sources that can help soften the blow on the
economy while our country transitions towards its decarbonising
targets. Many colleagues across both Houses would not be opposed
to a few cheaper alternatives involving oil, gas and, yes, one or
two coal-fired power stations. This would benefit those who face
a difficult winter ahead, those whose plight has been exacerbated
by the Government's decision to scrap the winter fuel payment
policy, and those 40% of EV users who have to pay 20% VAT on the
electricity to charge their car.
In a recent BBC report, the leader of the GMB union claimed that
Labour's green policies are costing jobs and hollowing out
working-class communities. This came after plans were announced
to shut down the Port Talbot coal-fuelled furnace, thus making
2,500 of the 4,000 workers at the last steelmaking plant
redundant. The Government's plans to decarbonise through
deindustrialisation will be very costly to workers across the
country working in similar industries with a heavy demand for
power.
Another core element of the Government's net-zero objectives is
the subject of this debate: the transition from internal
combustion engine cars—I will refer to them as ICE—to electric
ones, despite issues surrounding affordability, end-of-life
management and charging accessibility. I must stress that I
welcome the transition towards electric passenger vehicles. I
have one, and I love it, but its capital cost is not cheap, and
it was purchased on a company scheme—as we have heard from a
number of Peers—that is heavily subsidised. Indeed, without
significant progress in this sector, we will lag behind our
international counterparts and not fulfil our expectations of
reducing carbon emissions.
The noble Lord, , who is not in his place,
mentioned manufacturing. The only EVs manufactured in the UK are
the Aston Martin Rapide in Wales, the Nissan Qashqai and a series
of vans made by Stellantis on behalf of Vauxhall and Opel—the
Combo—Peugeot, Citroen and Fiat, which makes the Doblò. From
2026, we will have new Nissans—Juke, Leaf and Qashqai—and a new
Jaguar Land Rover factory in Merseyside, but the Mini EV that was
made in Oxfordshire has now moved to Leipzig and China, Ford is
in Cologne and GM is in North America.
It is also my view that the Government's plans to ramp up
penalties and restrictions on ICE cars are an alarming sign for
the UK economy. As the EV strategy report by the Environment and
Climate Change Committee indicates, the UK EV market remains
concentrated around high-value cars and SUVs. It proceeds to
stress the importance of providing affordable options for
consumers, most of whom are currently priced out of making the
leap to electric cars. I fear the Government have not understood
the economic magnitude of such a purchase for the average
consumer in the UK.
The end-of-life management of EVs is a similarly relevant issue.
The EV strategy report claims that with an increased number of
EVs expected in circulation, more must be done by the Government
to display the process of waste management and recycling of EV
batteries.
Along with agriculture, transport accounts for the largest
proportion of emissions in the country. We are discussing
EVs—cars and light vans—but there is no way in the foreseeable
future that HGVs will be electric-powered. For cost and practical
reasons, it is not possible for HGVs, which are essential to our
economic output and are designed to cover long distances within a
deadline, to be battery-powered. Indeed, I read somewhere that
one-third of the weight of a big HGV would be the weight of the
batteries, so they would become even more inefficient. If one
considers that 56% of What Car? readers surveyed cited the lack
of charge points as the reason preventing them going electric,
simply imagine the costs that running electric HGVs would have
for business and the economy.
We heard about charging. I am lucky; I am able to charge at home
and drive down to London, on the occasions when I do not take the
train, and then I can charge at my block of flats, so I have not
used a public charge point for probably three months. I have had
my car for four years. I thought the battery life would
deteriorate. In fact, it is still going strong after 40,000
miles.
There was talk about range anxiety. I personally quite enjoy the
frisson of dropping down. In fact, my record is getting down to
minus three miles. It was 10 pm. My wife was not amused,
particularly when the internal lights and the music went off, but
I was able to get to the top of a hill, cruise down and
regenerate enough electricity to get home.
That was not repeated when I was driving to Plymouth in the
winter, because I could, in my EV. I knew I was going to have to
fill up with electricity twice. On the second occasion, I was six
miles from Exeter Moto services—and in a very useful attendance
at the APPG for EVs I had heard the chief executive from Moto say
that it had doubled the number of charging stations there from 28
to 60 or so—so I thought, great, I am going to be fine.
Interestingly, he said that when all 60 charging points are being
utilised, that was equivalent to half the power requirements for
the whole of the city of Exeter, which was quite a statistic.
Anyway, I had six miles' range and, of course, my car stopped one
mile away from the services. The recovery vehicle came remarkably
quickly and had to do lots of different things as there is no
neutral in an electric car. He took me the one mile to the
service station and I asked him how many other EVs he was doing
this for. He said a lot of his call-outs were to collect people
like me who take a rather relaxed view of range anxiety. It is
for that reason, too, that I have retained my big diesel SUV,
which has a 600-mile range and if I am driving across the
continent or up to Scotland, that is what I will take, with four
children and maybe towing a caravan or something.
Finally, I want to say that I resent the scaremongering tactics
of politicians and lobbyists on the matter of net zero. Trying to
exact change through inciting fear among consumers and the
electorate is no way to govern. I invite the Government to
reconsider their methods for imposing this set of policies on the
public. There will no doubt be notable economic repercussions if
these policies are forced through in such a constrained way. We
must remember that even the Climate Change Committee has said
that by the time we reach net zero in 2050, we will still derive
25% of our energy from hydrocarbons. This is why it is called
“net” zero and I think a lot of people rather forget the net
bit.
5.32pm
(Lab)
I also would like to start my remarks on the progress of the
electric vehicle transition by thanking the noble Baroness, Lady
Parminter, for chairing the committee on this important inquiry
and for introducing the debate today so comprehensively. I also
thank all the clerks who help the committee so ably. I declare my
interest as serving on the committee and thank the many
organisations and people with an interest in the motor industry
and climate change for all the submissions I have received.
Needless to say, the report was produced and responded to by the
previous Conservative Government. It cannot go unremarked that
the rather confused state of the transition away from the
internal combustion engine was in no small measure due to mixed
messaging and lack of leadership from the Conservative
Government. The announcement in September last year to delay the
phase-out date for new petrol and diesel vehicles from 2030 to
2035 did immeasurable damage to consumer confidence and demand,
adding to the misinformation surrounding EV ownership.
The second-hand market is in disarray. The emphasis on cost
without including benefits led to declining private sales over
the next quarter. I am pleased to learn that throughout 2024
sales have recovered, reaching 20.8% of new vehicle registrations
in September and putting within reach the first ZEV mandate of
22% for 2024, on the pathway towards the phase-out date. Will my
noble friend the Minister, replying to this debate, outline the
new approach of this new Labour Government? Can he confirm that
the phase-out date will be restored to 2030?
In this context, further clarification as soon as possible on the
phase-out of hybrid vehicles would also be very helpful to the
industry. While hybrids can help consumers move towards EVs, the
cost to manufacturers of tooling and dual-system production is
considerable. A fresh communications strategy is a key
recommendation of the report and a clear opportunity for the new
Government to arrest the decline in private sales resulting from
misinformation.
The car industry is fluid at present, backing EVs while
simultaneously making internal combustion engine vehicles and
looking to the development of hydrogen engines—mainly for trucks,
construction and agriculture —and hydrogen fuel cells, which also
have zero emissions but are still very expensive until there is
mass manufacture. BMW and Toyota have just started collaborating
on fuel cells. Porsche has just announced new technology to “save
the ICE” by patenting a six-stroke petrol engine with reduced
emissions.
It is an industry under severe challenge, with many competing
developments, especially in the various export markets. Can my
noble friend the Minister outline the current position of
investments in battery technology and factories? I understand
that many plans have been downsized and Northvolt is considered
to be in difficulty. The challenges of EV transition resulting
from weight issues and recycling still need to be faced.
Misinformation feeds off these negative aspects and brings into
sharp focus the other clear recommendations in the committee's
report. The previous Government's response was similarly unclear
in its approach to taking many of the issues forward. A feature
of Conservative Governments is often to fiddle with the on/off
switch of consumer incentives, prematurely phasing out grants to
help bring about price parity between new purchases and existing
disparities on costs. I urge my noble friend the Minister to
bring forward new approaches to support new technologies and
developments that will support the transition to lower transport
emissions. Transport remains the UK's highest-emitting
sector.
In addition to the committee's many recommendations on costs and
tax, I mention the possible extension of the delay to introducing
vehicle excise duty for electric vehicles. While the forthcoming
Budget will signal new approaches for the economy, it remains a
challenging time for public expenditure and possible new
approaches to road taxation. The committee's report has made
detailed recommendations on the EV charging infrastructure and I
would welcome my noble friend the Minister's response to the many
comments other speakers have made.
Many of the several “black holes” in charge points exist in rural
areas. I emphasise the need to update and modernise the grid,
which crosses over into the energy market and the distribution of
energy throughout the UK. There are important developments and
costs associated with securing national grid connection and, in
this context, the charge points, especially for high-speed
recharging. Can my noble friend the Minister give your Lordships'
House any insights from his other responsibilities into the plans
ahead? Can he say how the new announcements on carbon capture and
storage investments will help capture carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere from e-fuels, and help their development?
Finally, I mention the need for an urgent reset of how planning
permissions operate for upgrading infrastructure and grid
connections. This extends from high-point connection
infrastructure to supporting measures that tackle the
charge-point divide that exists for those with no access to
driveway home recharging.
These are the key initial steps that a reset needs to take to
restart the transition from high-polluting ICE vehicles towards
achieving the important legal challenge of meeting the net-zero
goals by 2050.
5.39pm
(Con)
My Lords, this is an important debate at a pivotal moment for the
personal mobility that underpins our economy and growth. The
report explains in great detail that the choice of an electric
vehicle affords much greater driving pleasure, greater
acceleration, lower maintenance costs for home chargers,
competitive daily charges and, thanks to direct-drive motors, the
consignment of the grinding of gears to the history books—but if
only this mode shift were that simple.
The market for EVs was already stuttering when the report was
published in February. Since then, there have been further
dramatic changes, as the growth as a proportion of the whole
market has stagnated. We are literally at a fork in the road for
electric vehicles. The report highlights a number of things that
must be done for us to get back on track.
Before I talk about the rollout of chargers, I thank my noble
friend Lord Leicester for his comprehensive list of electric
vehicles that are made in this country. He missed out one that is
close to home for us both, in Norfolk, because Lotus Cars is
shortly to be manufacturing its Type 135 in our great county.
To return to the provision of charging infrastructure, the report
makes it clear that it is much easier for the market to provide
charging points along the motorways and main roads, while there
are few incentives on the B roads and in out-of-the-way places.
As a council leader back in 2018, I recognised that it was really
important for the council to take a lead in the provision of this
public infrastructure. Our approach was grounded in the
understanding that not every motorist has a long gravel drive;
many live in flats or terraced homes, and simply do not have
anywhere to park outside their home—a point that other noble
Lords have made. Our council understood that we would never get
the wide uptake of EVs unless we democratised the opportunity for
anybody to charge a vehicle close by, so we invested in the fat
cables in our car parks to serve the first generation of fast
chargers, with better app support. We have now extended the
number of installations in our leisure centres and other public
buildings with a second generation, taking advantage of
government funding and adding our own resources to
decarbonise.
However, we still needed to drive forward, having done our bit to
begin with. Two years ago, we made a big offer to each of the 120
town and parish councils in our district. We would procure,
install, maintain and manage an electric charging point in the
grounds of their village hall or bowls club car park; all they
needed to do was find that space. We would hook it up to the
mains, and the app would ensure that any electricity consumed by
chargers would be refunded, with a margin for themselves.
A third of our population lives in rural villages, and we wanted
all residents and their visitors to be able to charge, especially
as we had lost so many rural petrol stations. We would provide a
real choice of mobility technologies for everybody in the
countryside—and, of course, by putting the capital costs of these
chargers on to the local council tax payer, those amortisation
costs would then not fall in a surcharge on the pence per
kilowatt hour on the public charges, which the noble Baroness,
Lady Parminter, and the report have enumerated. We did not want
to discriminate against those who could not charge at home.
These parish councils are valued partners and make an enormously
positive contribution to our national life, but, two years on, I
regret to say that only a single installation has been made under
our offer to the villages. Although there are a few in the
pipeline, our offer ran flat. Yes, the market will provide on the
highway and, yes, urban authorities can upgrade their lamp-posts,
but we can and must do more in the countryside.
I want to relay some of the reasons why our parish councils did
not take up our offer. Some parishes simply assumed that there
was not enough electricity, notwithstanding that we were going to
have a survey as part of the offer. The offer was rejected on the
basis of hearsay, rather than evidence. Some market towns felt
that taking a lead locally and installing charging points was a
service—a service that, on principle, they did not seek to
provide. Others felt that they were not going to get used, so why
bother? A few cited the lack of mobile coverage in the
countryside as an issue; unless you have a mobile connection, you
cannot connect to the app and download the code, and so the
electric charger would not work—but that is of course
notwithstanding that most village halls in most parish councils
now have wifi.
There were cases where the parish council wanted to learn more
but could not persuade the village hall committee to get on
board. Some were just simply unrealistic. Sometimes in rural
areas there is just not the oomph in the network to provide the
sort of rapid charging found at a service station. They were
rejected on that basis, and therein lies a real case of the
excellent being an enemy of the simply satisfactory. Finally, and
notably, most local councillors just did not want people hanging
around the village hall. I was disappointed. There was a
pocketful of excuses.
I tell these disappointing stories because they are part of my
real-life experience, and if there is to be a plan for more
electric cars, we will need a national strategy that takes some
of these concerns into account. As the SMMT has observed to me,
just making the plan is worthless unless the market participants
can look beyond defeatism or prejudice. Having a plan is one
thing but delivering it is another. Only when we have leadership
across the whole of the public sector—that includes some of our
9,000 parish councils, as well as principal authorities—will we
get universal, not just urban-based, coverage.
It is important to make progress quickly because, unless we start
to address some of these headwinds, we will never get progress. I
was pleased that the report makes it clear that home-based
charging is nearly always cheaper, but home-based charging is
just one of the costs. It has become clear to me, especially
since February, when the report was written, that, leaving the
simple energy cost per mile to one side, the total cost of EVs is
now rising fast, and is making the internal combustion engine
even more competitive once again.
Although electric cars are now subsidised by manufacturers, as
the noble Lord, , said, the upfront purchase
costs are still more expensive—especially when taking into
account the interest payments, which are not the same as when
interest rates were 0.5%. There are also insurance costs: a
function of providing a like-for-like replacement, plus some
astonishingly risk-averse repair quotations for minor prangs in
the car park that see write-offs, are now driving premiums to
eye-watering levels. Depreciation is ruinous. It has destabilised
the motor traders, who have been trying to catch a falling knife
on the impaired value of their stock. The private motorist, as we
have heard, is at a serious disadvantage to the corporate
purchaser, with no tax incentives or opportunities for salary
sacrifice and other things. Of course, battery range is not what
it was thought to be—my noble friend made that point so
clearly.
I will not dwell further on the 20% versus 5% VAT level, but it
is discriminating against people who live in flats and do not
have the long gravel drive or large diesel 4x4 to fall back on.
We know from the SMMT that the fiscal drag is bringing electric
cars into the luxury super-charged tax rate, at another £500 per
year. Who would buy such a car with their own money? The costs,
over and above the mileage costs, are running away.
We hear now that road charges have been mooted. I can understand
why the noble Lord, , mentioned this, because it is
a truth that we will have to grip. Not only is the total cost of
ownership of electric versus combustion becoming much more
significant but, if we then end up with road pricing, it will be
the nail in the coffin. It would dramatically increase the cost
of running an electric car.
I am not going to dwell further on the increasing proportion of
electric vehicles against internal combustion engines in sales,
but the policy is destabilising UK motor dealers, and undermining
European and domestic manufacturers, by encouraging a flood of
Chinese imports of uncertain quality and with concerns over
embedded IT. This well-intentioned regulation is undermining our
economic stability and electronic security, delegating production
and wealth creation to parts of the world with lower
environmental standards. Given the importance of cars to the
global economy, we cannot ignore this global context. We must
approach EVs and our policies as part of economic security, which
in turn is part of our national security.
The Minister of State, Department for Energy Security and Net
Zero () (Lab)
My Lords, there has been a bit of chuntering so I should explain
that the Clock was wrong; the noble Lord has not taken more than
15 minutes.
(Con)
I thank the noble Lord, Lord Hunt. I noticed that it was showing
eight minutes when I started, so I think I have some more
time.
I was talking about the role of electric vehicles and our
treatment, in trade and tariffs, of our economic and national
security. A dilemma is around the corner. After the US elections,
will we follow the Canadians with a 100% tariff on Chinese EVs,
or will we pursue a more EU-aligned strategy that combines a less
aggressive tariff approach with tighter regulation—but at the
risk of hobbling UK production? Informed commentators know that
the upcoming UK policy choices on such matters as tariffs and
trade are being watched closely in Beijing and Washington, as
well as by our new friends in Brussels, who are the subject of a
renewed charm offensive from London.
Whether it is America, China or Europe, the trade treatment of
EVs here in the UK will set the tone for global trade
negotiations in a much more complicated trading environment in an
unstable world. One thing is for sure, though: if we side with
our allies on protectionist tariffs, this will drive up the costs
of UK electric vehicles still further, which will increasingly
aggravate the move to electric. But if we side with China, this
could kill off our industry anyway and leave us reliant on
imports for ever. These are big dilemmas.
There is nothing more democratic than the freedom to get about.
This report has made an important contribution to this important
market at a single point in time, but it is a fast-moving target.
I wish the noble Lord, Lord Hunt, well in navigating this complex
macroeconomic, security and environmental situation. My view is
that the fiscal approach, our environmental regulations and
government policy targets need to be urgently tweaked—not done
away with—to ensure that customer preference for electric
vehicles is maintained, not further undermined with our economy
damaged. This is not a market that can afford to go into reverse
but, unless there is a change in tone, gears will continue to
grind. Let us hope the engine does not seize up completely.
5.52pm
(LD)
My Lords, I congratulate my noble friend Lady Parminter and the
members of the committee on an excellent and comprehensive
report. This has been an important debate because it is about our
future: the future of our planet and our health. As the report
says, transport is our highest-emitting sector, with passenger
cars responsible for the majority of those emissions, so it is a
pity that we have had to wait nearly 10 months since the report
was published to have it debated in the House.
Although the consensus represented in the report has not
substantially changed, there have been some significant
fluctuations within the industry and in sales levels, as several
noble Lords pointed out. The automotive industry has certainly
experienced increasing frustration that the ZEV mandate, which I
regard as the stick, has not been matched by sufficient carrots
to encourage the take-up of EVs by private individuals, companies
and the public sector. Sales have, frankly, flagged. The SMMT has
pointed out that, since the previous Government's change of
policy, which I will refer to later, private new car demand has
declined by almost a fifth. This is despite the visible proof
that EVs are lovely cars—I know because I have my second one, so
I declare what I regard as a keen interest. They are quiet, clean
and smooth, and they have wonderful acceleration. Once you have
had one, it is difficult to go back. Diesel and petrol cars are
noisy, clunky and very smelly—even the modern ones.
So why the problems with EV sales? Many noble Lords have tackled
these issues. Fundamental is the lack of consumer confidence. The
committee emphasised that the Government need to do much more to
stimulate and encourage consumer confidence. There have been
serious and mounting problems. The previous Government, following
the Uxbridge by-election, decided that they were not just the
motorist's friend but the unreformed motorist's friend, scorning
lower speed limits and traffic calming measures as well as
championing the old internal combustion engine. Hence we had the
change of date from 2030 to 2035 for the end of internal
combustion engine sales. That fundamentally undermined the ZEV
mandate, as the two dates no longer matched and the buyers felt
no sense of urgency.
Alongside this, there was a sustained media campaign. My noble
friend Lady Parminter referred to it as a blatant campaign, and I
agree with her. It was largely but not exclusively in the
right-wing press, and there were degrees of misinformation and
anti-EV stories that built up on a weekly basis. To give one
example, the Luton Airport fire in the multi-storey car park was
initially and wrongly reported to have taken place in an electric
vehicle but actually took place in a diesel vehicle. That
misreporting got repeated on a regular basis. As noble Lords have
said, EVs are not more likely to catch fire, and are actually
rather less likely to catch fire, than internal combustion
vehicles.
There has been a knock-on impact on insurance premiums, and the
noble Baroness, Lady Young, referred to fairy stories being
peddled about battery life. I sold a seven year-old BMW, a very
early EV, and there had been no discernible deterioration in the
battery and its range in those years, over hundreds of thousands
of miles travelled. What should have happened in response to all
this misinformation was a formal and co-ordinated campaign, led
by the previous Government along with the auto industry and the
fire and health authorities, to rebut misinformation, lead with
positive stories and provide a database of reliable information
for potential buyers. We needed government leadership. Will we
get that leadership now? Will we get that co-ordinated campaign?
It is very much a case of better late than never.
We also need the Government to lead by example with the
transformation of the government car fleet. The committee made
recommendations on that, and the original government response to
those recommendations simply noted them. We need a totally EV or
hydrogen government car fleet in the very near future—by the end
of 2025. I would give the noble Lord that length of time for that
transformation. It should be possible by then.
Of course, this is about very much more than just supportive
government rhetoric. Previously the Government took their foot
off the pedal—I am sorry about the pun, but one finds it very
difficult to talk about transport without analogies—far too soon
on financial incentives to encourage the uptake of EVs. Those
vehicles are still noticeably more expensive to buy than internal
combustion engine vehicles. It is important to emphasise,
however, that they are very cheap to run. They are not just cheap
to refuel, they are also cheap in terms of the amount of
maintenance they need. They are a very good investment in that
respect.
The SMMT points out that our neighbours and competitors across
the world largely have incentive schemes. France, Spain, Italy,
Hungary, Canada, Australia and many US states have incentive
schemes. Norway has more EVs now than internal combustion
vehicles. It has worked the incentive schemes brilliantly. I
therefore very much hope that, in the Budget on 30 October, we
will see a new approach. If we do not see some changes from the
Government, EVs will remain the preserve of the better-off and
that is not socially acceptable.
We do not just need purchasing incentives; we need grants,
because the cost of EV charge point installation is considerable.
We need to avoid EVs being classed as luxury vehicles in terms of
vehicle excise duty. Very importantly, we also need to reduce VAT
on public charging points. Otherwise, those with drives will
always have an inbuilt advantage over the 40% of our population
who have no access to vehicle charging facilities—the noble Lord,
, made this point. So I urge
the Government to be bold on this. The amounts of money involved
are relatively small at a UK level.
My noble friend Lady Parminter referred to “black holes” in the
availability of charge points. The report goes into detail on
this, and motorway service stations have been talked of by other
noble Lords. The committee report refers to other problems, but I
want to go further. Many decades ago, a previous Government
regulated the way we buy petrol and diesel. The nozzle shape is
different; it is impossible to get confused between a petrol and
a diesel nozzle. The display of prices is regulated, so they are
calculated in a way that enables customers to compare them from
one location to another, and they are visible and so on. There
are a huge number of associated safety regulations. A roof is
almost always a feature of a filling station—you are protected
from the sun and from the rain. But EV owners appear not to be
entitled to this. The noble Lord, , made reference to that.
The method of plugging in varies from one type of car to another
and from one provider of EV services to another. There is no
roof, so you cannot see the screen very often, or you are
standing there in the pouring rain. The charge point is very
often in the back corner of a large car park, where you feel
vulnerable after dark. You very often do not know how much you
are going to pay until after you have used the facility, and it
is also difficult to know how you can pay. Very often, you have
to charge up a card with £5 or £10, using a provider that you
know you will never use again, so you will never get your money
back in a future charging. Why is it that we cannot have a
standardised system, so that people feel reassured? It is not
just range anxiety, it is being able to charge up—it is charging
anxiety when you get there.
It is time that the industry woke up to the brave new world and
provided the very best facilities. The people at Shell are my
heroes because they are beginning to do just that. It is
essential, for example, that everyone can pay by credit card. The
noble Lord, , did not think we should have
subsidies, but I say that subsidies are a well-worn path for new
industries—we smooth out their birth pangs—and I urge the
Government to look not just at reinstating targeted subsidies but
at simple, inexpensive, practical measures, such as standardised
signage on motorways to show where you can charge your car. The
report covers other key issues such as grid connections, the need
to change the planning approach and so on, but those are things
that will have to come, whatever happens about electric
vehicles.
Finally, we have a new Government and, I hope, a new attitude and
a new determination to stimulate this important industry. It will
bring jobs, better health and a greater hope for the future of
our planet. I hope that the Government will match any measures
with reinstating the 2030 date for ending sales of internal
combustion cars.
6.06pm
The (Con)
My Lords, I thank all noble Lords on the Environment and Climate
Change Committee who dedicated their time and effort to create
what is a first-class report. My warm thanks go also to the
witnesses who gave evidence; the appendix list reads like a Who's
Who of the motor industry. Their contribution provided the laser
focus required to really understand the issues at hand.
The Government are committed to net zero emissions by 2050 and,
on the basis that surface transport is the country's
highest-emitting sector, making up 23% of total UK emissions, it
is clear that electric vehicles have a role to play in the UK's
progress towards net zero. As with all types of markets, whether
that be financial markets, housing markets or indeed autocar
markets, consumer confidence is the foundation stone. If people
have confidence in the sector, it will grow, thrive and be a
positive asset to the UK economy, and that is exactly what we
need to instil confidence in the EV market. We are asking people
to change the habit of a lifetime, and habits can be very
difficult to change without the amount of support and
messaging.
The importance of clear communication to consumers on the use of
EVs should not be underestimated. As the Government continue
their work in this area, they must work with and consult the
automotive industry to ensure that they are taking a practical
and workable approach to these targets. Automotive companies
understand the problems and know consumer buying patterns. We
will not succeed if we do not embrace a partnership with them. It
is in both our interests and theirs to make this work, and that
is exactly what we did with our “plan for drivers” policy and our
work with the industry.
I ask the Minister to tell the House which motor industry
representatives the Government have recently consulted, in
particular about strategic approach and messaging changes, and
what the outcomes were of the consultations. While it is easy to
highlight the benefits of EVs, the fact remains that new models
are expensive relative to their petrol and diesel counterparts.
That is why we introduced the advanced manufacturing plan and
battery strategy. We worked closely with investors, local
authorities, businesses, trade associations and industry
experts.
Our goal must be to ensure that the UK continues to lead in the
development and deployment of clean and digital manufacturing
technologies. If we show we are committed to the longer-term
success of the sector, we will create a circular economy, we will
support market-led investment in innovation, research and
development, we will build our own UK supply chain resilience and
create thousands of new jobs. This will reduce costs, remove
barriers to boost competitiveness and guarantee investment from
international investors in the sector.
We injected £1.5 billion in funding via government grants to
support the growth of the early electric car market, which proved
vital in supporting the industry in its nascent days. We were
well on track to put a new electric vehicle within the reach of
many people and, by doing so, advance towards our net-zero
target. We worked closely with stakeholders to understand the
potential barriers to the uptake of used electric vehicles, and
we developed the global technical regulation on EV batteries to
set minimum durability and lifespan standards in the hope that
this would instil confidence in the second-hand market to drive
adoption.
We would therefore be keen to hear what strategy the Minister
will now employ to guarantee the continued success of what we
built and ensure a Great British-built EV will be a realistic
purchase for everyone in both the new and used market. We are
seeing a trend towards reliance on foreign imports of EVs, and we
must counter this. It will not help the UK economy or our own
climate change ambitions.
I also ask the Minister: what assessment have the Government made
of the impact of their changes to electric vehicle policy on
consumer costs? Will their policy drive up bills for hard-working
families?
Messaging and purchasing measures are no use if we do not have
the infrastructure in place to put the wheels in motion. EV
drivers must be confident they can enjoy stress-free journeys.
Between March 2023 and March 2024, we oversaw a 47% increase in
the number of public charge points available in the UK. We
established the £381 million local electric vehicle
infrastructure fund to help local authorities deliver a step
change in the number of on-street charge points. We established
the £70 million rapid charging fund for the delivery of charge
points at motorway service areas. We introduced the Public Charge
Point Regulations to improve the consumer experience, and we set
up the workplace charging scheme and electric vehicle
infrastructure grants to support schools, businesses, charities
and many different types of residential properties.
Given the progress we made in government, I hope the Minister
will be able to tell the House more about this Government's
intentions for the future. I would particularly like his feedback
on whether the Government are engaging with infrastructure funds
to inject private capital and what the plans are for rural areas.
We must unleash our rural opportunity—that is key to growing the
economy as a whole—so what is the Government's public charging
plan for the countryside? What steps are the Government taking to
ensure energy costs are affordable for those who own and run
electric vehicles?
End-of-life care for EVs also plays a crucial role. We must be
able to provide a full front-to-back service which will finish
with the recycling and disposal of EVs. What are the Government
doing to ensure we have the capacity to facilitate this? If sales
and production of EVs are set to increase, so must our ability to
safely take them out of service and reuse whatever we can as part
of our net-zero aspirations.
We provided £2 billion to support the transition to electric
vehicles. That funding focused on reducing barriers to the
adoption of EVs, including offsetting their higher upfront cost
and accelerating the rollout of charge point infrastructure. We
legislated to ban the sale of new petrol and diesel vehicles from
2035, to give consumers independence to make the choice for
themselves because of the higher upfront costs and to allow the
domestic auto industry to develop further. We introduced the
Public Charge Point Regulations, which made sure that everyone
could locate public charge points to suit their needs, compare
prices between those charge points and enjoy ease of payment in
the confidence that the points would be in good order.
The Government are planning to bring forward the ban on new
fossil-fuelled cars to 2030. How will they guarantee that they
can bring down the price of EVs to an affordable level and why
are they moving away from the 2035 deadline, which mirrors that
of the EU? A 2035 deadline will allow the UK industry to be far
more advanced in the production of electric vehicles and will, as
a result, provide a greater benefit to the UK economy and
consumer. Decarbonising the grid will incur material investment
costs, so any reduction in the cost of electricity is unlikely to
be seen in the short term. To be clear, the move to EVs has a
role to play in progress towards our net-zero targets, but is it
realistic for 2030?
We on these Benches will always put the British people first. If
the cost of the Government's new target is shown to drive up the
cost of buying and running electric vehicles, will the Government
do the right thing, reconsider their approach and put
hard-working consumers front of mind?
6.16pm
(Lab)
My Lords, it is a great pleasure to respond to what has been an
excellent debate. I thank the noble Baroness, Lady Parminter, for
her opening speech and the many members of the Select Committee,
and other noble Lords, who have spoken today. I very much agree
with the tributes paid by the noble Baroness, Lady Randerson, and
the noble Earl, Lord Effingham, to the noble Baroness, Lady
Parminter. Her opening speech without notes was a remarkable
effort that set the tone of the debate.
She outlined the main themes in the Select Committee report,
which were clearly built on in the debate. She spoke of this
being a critical challenge for the Government and the need for
the Government to take a lead. Her committee said that the
transition to electric vehicles was “essential” if the UK is to
meet its net-zero emissions target by 2050. Her report said that
EVs could provide “dramatic reductions” in emissions, in addition
to improved air quality, but that “concerted Government action”
is required.
In the debate, we heard about a number of the key measures. I
think that there is a pretty broad consensus among noble Lords
about what needs to happen, including the issues around upfront
costs, charging infrastructure and affordability, and the grid
and planning regulations. VAT and the vehicle excise duty were
also raised, which I am afraid I will completely duck and say are
a Treasury matter, although I have noted noble Lords' comments on
them.
The committee and the noble Lord, , said that, to ensure the
transition to EVs, it was necessary to decarbonise the
electricity used for charging. The report—as well as the noble
Lords, and , and the noble Earl, Lord
Leicester—also said that we need to review urgently progress on
EV and battery recycling facilities.
An important matter that a number of noble Lords raised,
including the noble Baroness, Lady Randerson, as well as the
committee, is that consumer confidence is critical to secure a
successful transition and that the Government need to do more to
convey a positive vision of EVs and to counter misinformation
about the technology. Of course, there are many other things in
the Select Committee report as well.
I was very interested in the noble Earl's comments about what he
thought the Government should be doing. He went through a list of
actions taken by the last Government, which I readily
acknowledge. However, he rather glossed over what the Select
Committee had to say when it was particularly critical of the
September 2023 speech by the former Prime Minister, , in which he pushed back the
petrol and diesel phase-out date from 2030 to 2035. The noble
Earl had a go at defending that, presenting it as a positive
asset in terms of consumer choice. However, I think—and the
evidence is here in this debate today— that it had a dampening
effect on industry and consumer confidence. That is a reflection
of the fact that Mr Sunak told the public that achieving
“net zero is going to be hard”.
He had emphasised the costs of EVs while failing to stress the
benefits. So, coming back to the issue of growing confidence,
this is clearly a role I believe government has to take, and it
is one that we readily accept.
There was a very interesting discussion about costs and subsidy.
The noble Lord, , was articulate as ever in
relation to that matter. He has a debate in a week's time looking
at the whole relationship between what we seek to do in terms of
energy net zero and the cost of it, and of course his speech
during the King's Speech debate reflected his views on that.
The noble Lord, , also raised the issue of costs.
Of course, costs and subsidies are involved, and the Department
for Transport is engaged in discussions with our friends in the
Treasury on Budget and spending review decisions. I recognise
that noble Lords have asked me to give precise dates about when
announcements will be made and how policies will be taken
forward. The fact is that I cannot say, because many of these are
bound up in the current spending discussions. However, I can say
that I have noted the issues that have been raised today, as will
the Department for Transport, and they will of course be
considered by the department in taking these matters forward.
Costs and subsidies are involved; equally, my noble friend Lady
Young made the very important point that the cost of not taking
action also has to be taken into account in terms of the impact
of climate change. As the noble Baroness, Lady Jones, said, that
is not some distant threat but is with us now, and we are seeing
the consequences.
I also agreed with the noble Baroness, Lady Jones, on the
question of decarbonising our energy network. That is why it is
one of the five key missions of the Government. I know that noble
Lords have asked me to set out how we will get there, first to
clean power 2030 and then to net zero. We have asked NESO, the
new body, to provide us with advice on the precise path to
2030.
I accept that the noble Baroness, Lady Jones, also mentioned the
need for a coherent approach across government. In a sense, I
hope that the fact that I am here at the Dispatch Box responding
to this issue is a reflection of that. However, I acknowledge, as
my noble friend said, that the policy lead for
electric vehicles rests with the Department for Transport.
I was disappointed that the noble Baroness, Lady Parminter, said
that the Government had not made sufficient progress since the
election. That has not been for want of lack of energy, emphasis
and importance. Of course it is very important but, as I said, so
much of this is tied into spending review and budgetary issues,
and it is difficult for me to give the kind of responses she
seeks. However, I can say that the Government see this as being a
very important policy area, and we look forward to making a
series of announcements in the next few months when we are
clearer about the financial situation and the other issues that
we need to take forward.
I turn to the manifesto commitment, which is clear. We said that
we would support the transition to electric vehicles by
accelerating the rollout of charge points and giving certainty to
manufacturers by restoring the phase-out date of 2030 for new
cars with internal combustion engines. I say to the noble Earl,
Lord Effingham, that we are of course actively engaging with the
industry on these matters. We are also supporting buyers of
second-hand electric cars by standardising the information
supplied on the condition of batteries.
I say to my noble friend that it is our firm
intention to phase out the sale of new cars powered solely by
internal combustion engine by 2030. All new cars and vans will
need to be zero-emission by 2035. I say to my noble friends Lady
Young and that we do believe that this is
doable. We are not being spooked by the adverse comments we
occasionally see in the media.
As noble Lords know, the zero-emission vehicle mandate will
increase from 22% this year to 80% in 2030, while that for vans
will rise from 10% this year to 70% in 2030. As the noble Earl,
Lord Effingham, said, following extensive consultation with
vehicle manufacturers, a number of flexibilities were built into
the ZEV mandate which vehicle manufacturers can use to be
compliant with the legislation. These include reducing the CO2 of
non-ZEVs to earn additional ZEV credits, borrowing from future
years and trading with other manufacturers. We think the targets
are within reach.
We then come to the matter of cost, which a number of noble
Lords, including the noble Baroness and the noble Earl, Lord
Effingham, raised. I know from looking at the media reporting on
electric vehicles in the last few months that there is a sense
that production and the whole policy have stalled, but it is
worth pointing out that the number of electric vehicles sold in
the UK continues to rise. So far, 270,000 battery electric cars
have been sold this year, 13% higher than last year. The
September figure is particularly encouraging; one hopes—I
certainly do— that it is a sign that consumers and the industry
now have greater confidence in our making progress on the targets
we have set, and that this will be the start of an acceleration
in interest in and the purchase of electric vehicles.
On the used car market, there is some evidence that electric cars
are now priced similarly to their petrol and diesel equivalents.
Obviously, this provides a more affordable route for drivers to
purchase an EV; none the less, I accept that cost is a key
barrier to EV uptake. We know that, in the end, everyone should
benefit from the transition to EVs and the cheaper running costs
that can occur, but the Government are going to continue to
review demand incentives to make sure that we strike the right
balance between value for money for the taxpayer and support for
the transition to electric vehicles. So, this is very much a work
in progress.
It is the same answer, really, in relation to charging
infrastructure and costs. We know that to give the public
confidence in making the switch to electric vehicles, they must
be confident in their ability to charge those vehicles. The noble
Earl illustrated the point very well indeed.
I take on board the comments made by the noble Lord, , about the democratisation of
charging —as he described it—the potential contribution of parish
councils, the lack of uptake and the issue of rurality, which I
will make sure the department gives full consideration to, as I
recognise that this is very important. He talked about parish
councils, but we know that the performance of local authorities
generally is patchy. In souping-up the policy going forward, we
must look at how we can encourage local authorities, including
parish councils, to take up the charge rather more
enthusiastically.
Obviously, charging at home works for many people. One of the
benefits of the election was campaigning, during which we knocked
on doors and talked to people who had home chargers. My
perception was that people who have them are very happy with
them, but clearly it cannot be for everyone. Noble Lords have
raised a number of problems for those people who do not have
access, as well as the issue of renters. Clearly, we need to
reflect on what we can do to improve the situation. Public
charging provision has increased by 42% since last year, and the
noble Earl referred to that as well. We need to look at what we
can do to encourage ever-more increase in the charge point
provision.
I take note of the well-made point from the noble Lord, , on service stations and rapid
charging points. My understanding is that we now have 960 open
access rapid and ultra-rapid charge points at motorway service
areas, with many more on or close to our key A roads. The rapid
charging fund is piloting and funding a portion of the cost of
upgrading the electricity grid at motorway service areas where it
is currently not commercially viable. We are looking at
applications for the fund pilot at the moment and will be coming
forward with further information in due course—to use the phrase
beloved of government departments.
The noble Lord, , referred generally to the need
for a reliable charging network. The Public Charge Point
Regulations were introduced in November last year, meaning, in
effect, that charge point operators will be required to offer
24/7 access to a free helpline, share open data, increase the
provision of contactless payment options and be 99% reliable
across each rapid charging network. We are definitely not
complacent on this; we know that more needs to be done. We also
recognise the importance of what the right reverend Prelate the
said very well in relation
to fairness.
The noble Lords, and , mentioned road pricing. I must
say from the Dispatch Box that there are no current plans to
introduce a system of national road pricing. However, we
recognise that motoring tax revenues in general need to keep pace
with the changes that are being brought about by the switch to
EVs, while keeping the transition affordable for consumers.
A number of noble Lords made important points about
manufacturing, recycling and the battery supply chain. I have
listened to those very carefully indeed. To the noble Lord,
, and the noble Earl, Lord
Effingham, I can say that we are going to work closely with
investors, via the automotive transformation fund, to build a
globally competitive EV and battery supply chain in the UK.
I ought to turn to the issue of communication, because this is
such an important area. A number of noble Lords—the noble Lords,
and , the right reverend Prelate and
my noble friend Lady Young—particularly raised the problem of
misinformation about electric vehicles. This is something we need
to be concerned about and not be complacent. I recognise that we
as the Government have a clear duty and responsibility in terms
of giving clear information to consumers on the benefits and use
of electric vehicles. We need to work closely with industry in
terms of correcting this misleading coverage and delivering
factual communications to consumers on the many benefits that
electric vehicles provide. We are already taking proactive action
to counter inaccurate information presented by the media on the
subject of EVs when this arises. Today's debate has reinforced my
view of the importance of doing this and I know that my
colleagues in the Department for Transport will be listening very
carefully to what has been said in relation to the role of
government here.
To summarise the Government's view, we welcome this report. I
know that it was published in February and here we are in
October, but none the less I can reassure members of the Select
Committee that the report has informed, and is informing, the
Government's policy now about the way we need to go forward. I
have said already that there are a lot of areas where I cannot
give precise answers in terms of what we will do and what the
dates are, because it is very much dependent on the spending
review and budgetary discussions. Let us be frank: the public
finances are particularly challenging and I will not hesitate to
remind the party opposite of the public expenditure hole that
they left us in. Clearly, that is a factor as well. But this is
an important policy area; electric vehicles play a major role in
the journey towards net zero and we know that it is important
that we come back with some of the answers to the questions noble
Lords have raised today.
In conclusion, I again thank the Select Committee and its chair
for the extraordinary, valuable piece of work that they have
done.
6.37pm
(LD)
My Lords, I will briefly thank the Minister for putting on record
how important this policy area is to the Government, for
confirming that they accept their responsibility to grow
confidence in this market and for saying that they have heard the
calls from around this House on the issues of the costs and
subsidies that will be necessary if we are to grow this market.
The Budget is coming very soon—we will see whether the warm words
we have heard tonight will be translated into the necessary
action. I beg to move.
Motion agreed.
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