Spanish auto lobby ANFAC on Wednesday called on the government that will emerge from the July 23 general election to commit to decarbonisation fully, saying electric vehicle (EV) sales had yet to reach the number needed to meet emission targets.
“The industry needs (the new government’s) full support and commitment…to speed up decarbonisation under a mobility model where the clean, connected and sustainable vehicle is considered one more solution to move towards zero-emission mobility,” Jose Lopez-Tafall, the group’s director-general, said.
Spain fell short of the electrification levels required to meet last year’s annual emission reduction targets, estimated by ANFAC at 120,000 new EV sales and 45,000 new charging points, he said. Instead, 78,000 EVs were sold and 18,000 charging points installed.
“2022 has been one of the worst years in the sector’s recent history,” he said, as Spanish car manufacturers’ net profit last year dropped by about one third from 2021 to 767 million euros ($845 million).
Last year’s semiconductor shortages and higher energy costs disrupted automakers’ production plans and delayed the market’s recovery from the pandemic’s impact.
Lopez-Tafall said 2023 was crucial to boosting EV sales and turning Spain into an electromobility hub.
“We will never give up on Spain being the second largest car producer in Europe and fulfilling its environmental commitments,” he added.
However, the lobbying group expects full-year EV sales in 2023 to reach 950,000, far from the national market target of 1.3 million.
($1 = 0.9079 euros)