Electric Cars

Australian car lobby argues against call to phase out petrol and diesel cars

Published by
Bridie Schmidt

The Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) says it wants to take a “technology neutral” stance and does not support the Grattan Institute’s call for a phase out of petrol and diesel cars by 2035.

FCAI chief executive Tony Weber believes the market, not policy, should decide how to achieve this, and decisions should be left with car makers, rather than policy makers.

“Governments should pick targets, not technologies. Decisions around technology should be left to the experts- the vehicle makers,” Weber said in a statement on Tuesday. “The aim should be to reduce CO2 rather than give preference to one technology over another.”

The main thrust of the Grattan report is to impose ever tighter emissions standards for fuel that will result in the phasing out of new petrol and diesel car sales by 2035, which Grattan argues is necessary to meet net zero targets by 2050. Grattan says targets don’t work, because they don’t necessarily achieve early change.

The FCAI has the opposite view. It argues only for a voluntary emissions standard that falls well short of limits imposed by the European Union. Being voluntary, carmakers flouting those standards would not receive so much as a slap on the wrist either.

As reported by The Driven, the first round of vehicle emissions standards published by the FCAI in March showed Australian vehicles are up to 40% worse than European counterparts.

Weber on Tuesday said that the auto industry body supports many of the key highlights of the Grattan paper, but insists that this can be achieved without targeting support to particular technologies.

“This report highlights key changes which can be made to increase the take up of electric and hydrogen-powered vehicles, and lower Australia’s emissions more broadly,” he said in a statement.

“Many of the policy directions outlined in the report align with policies FCAI has maintained for years, including a reduction in car import charges and the scrapping of the luxury car tax. Tax reform would reduce the cost of electric vehicles in Australia.”

Recent Posts

Nio reaches 90 million EV battery swaps, eyes on Australia market

They said the technology would never work, but Nio has now completed 90 million battery…

28 October 2025

Rio Tinto launches battery swap electric truck trial fleet at giant copper mine

Mining giant Rio Tinto is trialling battery swap technology for electric haul trucks at one…

27 October 2025

The EV that feels like wearing a Marlboro-branded nicotine patch, with a lousy digital experience

In an electric world, car owners need to get good at digital, or don't bother.…

27 October 2025

BYD’s biggest electric EV heads to global markets as Atto 8

BYD's biggest EV, with 7-seats and up to 810 kW of power, heads to global…

27 October 2025

Deepal’s new electric SUV spotted ahead of imminent Australian launch

Deepal's next electric EV spotted in Australia for first time, expected to arrive with over…

27 October 2025

Construction code delay risks pulling the plug on home charging for EVs

A three year delay to proposed updates to the National Construction Code will make it…

26 October 2025