• Main
  • Social Media
  • GLOBE News

Upcoming Events »

VIDEO »

Businesses leading the way on sustainability

High Prices Will Limit Sales of Electric Vehicles in 2012

December 23, 2011
High Prices Will Limit Sales of Electric Vehicles in 2012

GLOBE-Net, December 23, 2011 - Many potential buyers will hold off on purchases of electric vehicles (EVs) during 2012 due to the premium pricing of the vehicles, according to a new white paper from Pike Research.

Nissan raised the price of the Leaf for 2012, and while the 2012 Chevrolet Volt will sell for $1,000 less, the car comes without several features that were previously standard but are now options. 

According to data from Pike Research's annual Electric Vehicle Consumer Survey, the optimal price for a plug-in electric vehicle (PEV) to engage consumers is $23,750.  With the 2012 Toyota Prius PHEV ($32,000), the Honda Fit BEV ($36,625), and the Ford Focus EV ($39,995) all north of $30,000 (before federal incentives), consumers hoping for an affordable EV ride have been left wanting. 

These relatively high selling prices will constrain the market for PEVs in 2012.  The white paper, which includes 10 predictions about the EV market in 2012, is available for free download on Pike Research's website.

"Vehicles on sale in 2012 will not benefit from recent cost reductions in batteries," says research director John Gartner. 

"The batteries in these vehicles were ordered before 2012, so any flexibility in reducing vehicle pricing will not occur until 2013 or 2014 at the earliest. 

Nevertheless, the global market for plug-in electric vehicles will grow to more than a quarter million vehicles in 2012 - a number sufficient to put an end to the 'are they for real?' speculation that has surrounded this market."

Pike Research believes in 2012, plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs) will take major strides toward becoming a mature if small component of the overall vehicle fleet. The number of battery electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles sold and the variety of options for consumers will expand rapidly.

The fruits of the multi-billion dollar investments in recent years in lithium ion battery manufacturing facilities will provide abundance in capacity that could outpace demand, but any oversupply will not impact vehicle pricing.

In order to analyze the impacts of these and other key issues facing the EV industry, Pike Research has prepared a white paper that makes ten predictions about the continuing evolution of the market in 2012 and beyond.

The White Paper is available here

 
This article has been viewed 527 times