Policy

“Electric car is coming to a standstill:” Germany brings sudden end to EV subsidies

Published by
Soren Amelang

The German government has abruptly ended its electric car subsidy programme in the wake of last week’s agreement on savings to overcome the budget crisis.

The economy and climate ministry (BMWK) said in a press release on Saturday (December 16) that applications for the subsidy of up to 4,500 euros for the purchase of a battery-electric car are no longer possible.

Payments already approved will be honoured, and existing applications “will be processed in the order in which they are received and – provided the eligibility requirements are met – approved.”

The ministry said that a total of 2.1 million electric vehicles had been subsidised under the scheme, with payouts adding up to around 10 billion euros since its inception in 2016.

“The funding programme has been very successful and has decisively advanced electric mobility in Germany,” the ministry said, adding the subsidy was due to expire next year anyway.

The budget crisis was sparked in November when the country’s constitutional court ruled that the plan to transfer 60 billion euros to a special fund earmarked for climate and transformation projects was unlawful.

In response, the government decided last week to cut spending on climate and transformation projects by billions of euros. Economy and climate minister Robert Habeck had said that the cuts included an earlier end to electric vehicle support, but didn’t specify any details – meaning the  sudden end to the electric car subsidy surprised many.

“As the buyer advances the premium and can claim it back [once] the vehicle has been registered, several thousand people are now likely to be quite angry or at least disappointed,” wrote Christina Kunkel in an op-ed for Süddeutsche Zeitung. “Once again, the government is showing people that they cannot be relied upon.”

The government plans to have at least 15 million electric cars on German roads by 2030, but the subsidy cut fuelled fears that this target is out of reach.

“The electric car is coming to a standstill,” industry expert Ferdinand Dudenhöffer told Focus Online. Dudenhöffer forecast that scrapping the subsidy scheme will lead to a 200,000 reduction in new electric car registrations next year.

There was also criticism from within the government parties. Several deputy heads of the Social Democrats parliamentary group told newswire dpa that the subsidy cut was “extremely unfortunate,” and called on Habeck to organise “a more reliable transition.”

First published by Clean Energy Wire. Reproduced with permission.

Recent Posts

Retrofit nation: Call for mass conversion of Australia’s truck fleet to spark battery industry

A call has gone out for projects that think big on ways to achieve the…

May 17, 2024

Sydney council installs seven new pole-mounted EV chargers

Sydney council completes installation of seven new street side power pole-mounted electric vehicle (EV) chargers,…

May 17, 2024

All new Kona electric test drive: Cheaper, better, more range and V2L

The electric Kona is now on a dedicated EV platform, which means it is roomier,…

May 17, 2024

Ikea to build electric truck charging network across Australian stores

Furniture giant IKEA to build electric truck charging network at its 10 Australian retail locations…

May 17, 2024

Vehicle efficiency laws passed after Greens secure deal to prevent fast-tracking of gas projects

Greens agree to back the proposal in the Senate without any changes in exchange for…

May 16, 2024

Tesla Model 3 spotted testing with no mirrors and new camera locations

A modified Tesla Model 3 with no side mirrors and new camera locations provides hints…

May 16, 2024