Abstract

This article presents experience curves and cost-benefit analyses for electric and plug-in hybrid cars sold in Germany. We find that between 2010 and 2016, the prices and price differentials relative to conventional cars declined at learning rates of 23 ± 2% and 32 ± 2% for electric cars and 6 ± 1% and 37 ± 2% for plug-in hybrids. If trends persist, price beak-even with conventional cars may be reached after another 7 ± 1 million electric cars and 5 ± 1 million plug-in hybrids are produced. The user costs of electric and plug-in hybrid cars relative to their conventional counterparts are declining annually by 14% and 26%. Also the costs for mitigating CO2 and air pollutant emissions through the deployment of electrified cars tend to decline. However, at current levels, NOX and particle emissions are still mitigated at lower costs by state-of-the-art after-treatment systems than through the electrification of powertrains. Overall, the observation of robust technological learning suggests policy makers should focus their support on non-cost market barriers for the electrification of road transport, addressing specifically the availability of recharging infrastructure.

Highlights

  • Electric and plug-in hybrid cars have become increasingly popular, reaching market shares of 29% in Norway, 6% in the Netherlands, and 1.5% in China, France, and the UK (IEA, 2017)

  • The mean price of electric cars sold in Germany has decreased by 63% from 1090 ± 560 EUR2015/kW in 2010 to 400 ± 220 EUR2015/ kW in 2016; the mean price of plug-in hybrids has decreased by 24% from 330 ± 10 EUR2015/kW in 2011 to 250 ± 60 EUR2015/kW in 2016

  • The mean price of comparable conventional cars has increased by 21% from 180 ± 30 EUR2015/kW in 2010 to 220 ± 50 EUR2015/kW in 2016 (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Electric and plug-in hybrid cars have become increasingly popular, reaching market shares of 29% in Norway, 6% in the Netherlands, and 1.5% in China, France, and the UK (IEA, 2017). China and the USA, for example, aim at operating 5 million (SC, 2012) and 1.2 million electric vehicles (IA-HEV, 2015), respectively by 2020. Germany aims at having 1 million electric and plug-in hybrid cars on the roads by the same year (BR, 2016a). If these targets are to be achieved, persisting market barriers need to be removed by policy interventions that, in turn, require a good understanding of consumer preferences (Green et al, 2014) and techno-economic progress (IEA, 2016, IRENA, 2017a,b)

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