"After the all the rough and tumble play of March,
nothing like some fika time in April, to recover the energies…"
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Time for fika
In Sweden, the local plug-in market was up 44% YoY, to 3.059 registrations, with BEVs in particular jumping 271%, placing the PEV share at 10%, with BEVs alone having 5% share, dropping slightly the 2019 plugin share to 12%, still a big improvement over the 8% of last year.
Meanwhile, the mainstream market continues sliding, dropping 12% last month, with the WLTP blues seemingly having no end in sight.
Has Sweden hit peak-ICE? It seems so, at least.
Now about charging infrastructure...It is badly needed, especially for long trips, without it, PHEVs will still be around for a while.
Has Sweden hit peak-ICE? It seems so, at least.
Now about charging infrastructure...It is badly needed, especially for long trips, without it, PHEVs will still be around for a while.
Right now buyers are running away from fossil-fueled vehicles, with diesels at 39% share last month, with a stampede-like movement into plugins, and BEVs in particular, but because BEVs are still model/production constrained, it seems many people prefer to buy a PHEV, or wait in line for a BEV, than to buy/lease another ICE-based vehicle.
This is starting to become a trend, once a market is regularly at over 10%, the mainstream market starts to suffer and decline, as people move away from regular petrol/diesel vehicles.
Another Kia, the Optima PHEV, closes the ranking, with 289 registrations, most of them station wagons, proving that Tesla's choice for a sedan body is costing it sales in Europe, and in this particular case, in Sweden, a wagon-friendly market.
Looking at last month Best Sellers, the Tesla Model 3 repeated the previous month win, although this time the race was closer, with the #2 Kia Niro PHEV only 144 units behind.
Another Kia, the Optima PHEV, closes the ranking, with 289 registrations, most of them station wagons, proving that Tesla's choice for a sedan body is costing it sales in Europe, and in this particular case, in Sweden, a wagon-friendly market.
Pl
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Model
|
Sales
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1
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Tesla Model 3
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446
|
2
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Kia Niro PHEV
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302
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3
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Kia Optima PHEV
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289
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4
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Mit. Outlander PHEV
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245
|
5
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Renault Zoe
|
204
|
On the 2019 ranking, there is not much to talk about, on the top positions, the Tesla Model 3 is looking to catch the leader Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV (maybe it get there in June?), followed by two Kias, with the Niro PHEV in 3rd, and the Optima PHEV in 4th.
The surprise of the month was the Tesla Model S,jumping three spots, to #14, thanks to 90 deliveries, a new year best, that is all more surprising once you realize it was made in the first monh of the quarter, usually a slow month for Tesla.
In the last places of the Top 20, the #19 VW e-Golf scored 52 deliveries, the model best score this year. It seems the soon-to-be-departed EV still has some tricks up its sleeve.
The surprise of the month was the Tesla Model S,jumping three spots, to #14, thanks to 90 deliveries, a new year best, that is all more surprising once you realize it was made in the first monh of the quarter, usually a slow month for Tesla.
In the last places of the Top 20, the #19 VW e-Golf scored 52 deliveries, the model best score this year. It seems the soon-to-be-departed EV still has some tricks up its sleeve.
The Audi e-Tron joined the Top 20, in #20, thanks to 43 deliveries, making it April's best selling full size SUV. And with less than 80 units separating it from the Volvo XC90 PHEV, it should be an interesting race to see who wins the category 2019 title.
In the manufacturers ranking, Kia is in the lead, with 23% share (down 2%), with Volvo (18%) now in Second, followed by Mitsubishi (14%, down 2%) and Tesla (14%, up 1%), with both discussing the last podium seat.
Tesla Model 3 and the ICE competition
Pl
|
Model
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2019
Sales |
1
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Volvo S/V60
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7.194
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2
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VW Passat
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2.128
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3
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Mercedes C-Class
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1.835
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4
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Tesla Model 3
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1.451
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5
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BMW 3-Series
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1.317
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After a thunderous arrival in March, the Tesla Model 3 also made na impact in the midsize car category, already showing up in #4 on the 2019 category ranking, with the Second Place in its range of possibilities. Of course, the Volvo S/V60 series leadership is out of the equation (quite naturally, i would say, i mean, its a Volvo...in Sweden).
In #5 we have the BMW 3-Series, that needs desperately the 330e version to avoid the sales bleeding…And let's not even mention the Audi A4, the lamest duck of them all.
A bit off-topic, but the 3rd best selling full-size car, the BMW 5-Series, registered 1.419 units this year, while the leader Mercedes E-Class registered 1.810 units, so this is one of those markets where the Model S numbers should grow significantly, as there is plenty of room for it.
I wonder why the large Volovs (both S/V90 and XC90) did so poorly in April?...
ReplyDeleteThe "surprisingly" good deliveries of Model S seem to confirm my suspicion that of the >10,000 cars in transit at the end of Q1, there was a somewhat significant number of Model S/X too -- not all Model 3, as most people seem to assume...
ReplyDeleteThis stands to reason, considering that they made almost 4,000 more of them than they delivered -- and Model S/X are still built to order... Some of these extra units were probably used to replenish the fleet of loaners etc. after the December sell-off -- but surely nothing close to 4,000.
I agree with that, other markets have been having the same thing, with strong April numbers for the Model S.
DeleteDoes anybody have an idea why the Opel Ampera-e is not in the top 20 in Sweden?
ReplyDeleteAre there any Opel dealers in Sweden at all?
The Ampera-e is not sold in Sweden. Basically, that model is sold in 4/5 countries (NO, NL, DE, CH).
DeleteThanks Jose, that explains a lot.
ReplyDelete