BYD Qin in Uruguay |
Picking up on an article published in June, the Top 10 Automotive EV Groups reflected the total volume of plug-ins sold by each Manufacturing Group, but to put that into context, i have decided to compare it with this year Automotive EV Groups:
Sales '15 | % | Total Sales | % | |||
Renault-Nissan | 44,003 | 18 | 265,205 | 27 | ||
VW (VAG) | 28,480 | 12 | 42,743 | 4 | ||
BYD | 25,592 | 11 | 51,338 | 5 | ||
Tesla | 24,867 | 10 | 83,587 | 9 | ||
Mitsubishi | 24.117 | 10 | 108,883 | 11 | ||
BMW | 15,469 | 6 | 31,822 | 3 | ||
Ford | 11,548 | 5 | 65,696 | 7 | ||
GM | 11,617 | 4 | 100,818 | 10 | ||
- If the Renault-Nissan Alliance continues to lead, the fact is that they are losing ground to the competition;
- Volkswagen Group and BYD are surging and closing in on the Alliance, VAG is a particularly dangerous competitor, considering their deep pockets and powerful R&D skills, question is, will they get serious on plug-ins?
- Tesla is riding the plug-in wave, Ford is starting to lose ground, due the lack of new products to fight all the newcomers coming in;
- BMW's bet on the i sub-brand is being rewarded with an important role in the EV scene, and with a bunch of PHEV versions coming to the regular lineup, the german brand can only see its share grow;
- Finally, GM. The early bet on the Chevy Volt lifted it to a leading role in the early days (Chevrolet was the Best-Selling brand in 2012), but the other offerings from GM failed to succeed, be it because of limited production/diffusion (Chevy Spark EV) or outlandish prices (Cadillac ELR), that together with the early sales decline of the Volt and current generation change, lead GM this year to be far from the top places and has an eye on bullish chinese carmakers (Geely Group, BAIC, Zotye, etc) and even the latest plug-in enthusiast, Daimler-Mercedes, to retain its current #8.
(An important absence here is Toyota, #4 in historical volumes, but only #13 this year...)
Looking at the numbers in a different way, grouping sales by the carmakers origin, two surprising facts appear:
- This year, China is the largest maker of plug-ins...
- ...And Germany is the Third largest EV maker, ahead of the US!
Sales '15 | % | Total Sales | % | |||
China | 61,637 | 25 | 135,921 | 14 | ||
Japan | 57,813 | 24 | 380,910 | 39 | ||
Germany | 50,558 | 21 | 96,380 | 9 | ||
USA | 47,279 | 19 | 251,082 | 26 | ||
France | 14,803 | 6 | 92,289 | 9 | ||
Jose, these totals are through July or August? Thx
ReplyDeleteAugust. :)
DeleteHi Jose.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your hard work - putting together all these sales figures! I have one question regarding these figures. You always talk about "plug-ins" sold. What is included in these figures: PHEV and BEV? Or only PHEV?
Thanks!
Both, PHEV and BEV.
DeleteMany thanks!
DeleteHi Jose.
ReplyDeleteWhich period does the total sales volume compromise?
Best regards
From 2008 until now.
ReplyDeleteThe 2008 Tesla Roadster is considered the first modern plug-in car, so it makes sense that the numbers start from there.
Thanks again for your quick reply!
ReplyDelete