While the UK celebrates the gleaming new structure of its record-breaking EV market, a closer inspection reveals potential cracks in the foundation, raising serious questions about the long-term sustainability of the current boom. The success of September appears to be built on temporary supports that, when removed, could compromise the entire edifice.
The first major crack is the market’s over-reliance on subsidies. The entire structure is currently propped up by a government grant. While effective, this is not a permanent feature. The finite nature of the grant—capped at 400,000 buyers—means this key support will be removed. The boom is therefore not organic, but artificially induced.
The second crack lies within the regulatory framework. The ZEV mandate, which should be a solid pillar of the foundation, has been weakened with “flexibilities.” The Climate Change Committee has warned this could lead to higher emissions, suggesting the policy’s structural integrity has been compromised. The market is being built to a less rigorous standard than originally designed.
A third crack is the weak economic ground on which the structure is built. Overall car sales are still below pre-pandemic levels, indicating that the wider economic environment is soft. The EV boom is a gleaming tower in an otherwise subdued landscape, and its success is vulnerable to these broader economic pressures.
These foundational weaknesses—a dependency on temporary subsidies, a compromised regulatory framework, and a fragile economic base—threaten the long-term viability of the current growth trajectory. While the view from the top is impressive today, the UK must address these cracks to ensure its EV market doesn’t face a future collapse.
Cracks in the Foundation: Is the UK’s EV Boom Truly Sustainable?
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