Petrol car sales drive past diesel in Europe after 9 years

Diesel’s market share in the EU-15 fell from 50.2% to 46.3% of new car registrations in the first half of 2017. In absolute numbers, 152,323 less diesel cars were sold.

Autocar Professional BureauBy Autocar Professional Bureau calendar 30 Sep 2017 Views icon4356 Views Share - Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to LinkedIn Share to Whatsapp
Petrol car sales drive past diesel in Europe after 9 years

In a global trend which is accelerating in the past year following Dieselgate, fewer motorists are choosing diesel cars over their petrol siblings.

Diesel’s market share in the EU-15 fell from 50.2% to 46.3% of new car registrations in the first half of 2017. In absolute numbers, 152,323 less diesel cars were sold. This drop was offset by an increase in the sale of petrol vehicles. Auto makers caution that this shift to petrol engines with higher CO2 values will pose additional challenges to meeting future CO2 reduction targets.

For the first time since 2009, petrol vehicles have overtaken diesel to become the most sold car type in the EU-15. Petrol vehicles now account for 48.5% of new passenger car sales, up from 45.8% a year ago, which translates into 328,615 extra petrol cars sold year-on-year. Electrically-chargeable vehicles accounted for 1.3% of total car sales (a market share which remains stable), hybrids for 2.6%, and cars powered by propane or natural gas for 1.3%.

According to ACEA (European Automobile Manufacturers Association), petrol vehicles now account for 48.5% of new passenger car sales, up from 45.8% a year ago, which translates into 328,615 extra petrol cars sold year-on-year. Electrically-chargeable vehicles accounted for 1.3% of total car sales (a market share which remains stable), hybrids for 2.6%, and cars powered by propane or natural gas for 1.3%.

“Alternative powertrains will undoubtedly play an increasing role in the transport mix, and all European manufacturers are investing heavily in them,” stated ACEA secretary General Erik Jonnaert. “To this end, more needs to be done to encourage consumers to buy alternatively-powered vehicles, for instance by putting in place the right incentives and deploying recharging infrastructure across the EU.”

“In the meantime, however, as diesel cars emit significantly less CO2 than equivalent petrol-powered vehicles, they will have to be part of the gradual transition to low-carbon vehicles, acting as a ‘bridge’ technology.”

Jonnaert added: “Policy makers need to be aware that a sudden shift from diesel technology to petrol will lead to an increase in CO2 emissions, given that the market penetration of alternative powertrains remains low.”

ACEA represents the 15 Europe-based car, van, truck and bus manufacturers: BMW Group, DAF Trucks, Daimler, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, Ford of Europe, Hyundai Motor Europe, Iveco, Jaguar Land Rover, Opel Group, PSA Group, Renault Group, Toyota Motor Europe, Volkswagen Group, Volvo Cars, and Volvo Group

RELATED ARTICLES
Trump slashes import tariff for UK-made vehicles to 10%

auther Autocar Professional Bureau calendar09 May 2025

Tax applies to first 100,000 cars exported from UK to US; reduced from a previously announced 25% rate.

Hyundai Mobis develops battery system with built-in fire extinguishing feature

auther Autocar Professional Bureau calendar06 May 2025

The new system prevents heat from being transferred to adjacent cells and extinguishes a fire early by spraying an agent...

FORVIA and Smart Eye unveil in-car iris and facial biometric authentication

auther Autocar Professional Bureau calendar06 May 2025

This world-first innovation not only enhances the user experience by enabling seamless and secure payments but also open...