The Japan Times - EV sales rebound in Germany as Chinese brands make inroads

EUR -
AED 4.288965
AFN 76.489619
ALL 96.477831
AMD 445.781647
ANG 2.090714
AOA 1070.811806
ARS 1705.460341
AUD 1.737776
AWG 2.10192
AZN 1.989948
BAM 1.954868
BBD 2.353179
BDT 142.771963
BGN 1.946255
BHD 0.440132
BIF 3459.994444
BMD 1.167734
BND 1.497286
BOB 8.090936
BRL 6.292681
BSD 1.168343
BTN 105.080375
BWP 15.603564
BYN 3.435163
BYR 22887.577149
BZD 2.34972
CAD 1.618537
CDF 2620.982539
CHF 0.931484
CLF 0.026662
CLP 1045.927113
CNY 8.170924
CNH 8.165371
COP 4381.920064
CRC 580.823214
CUC 1.167734
CUP 30.944938
CVE 110.438409
CZK 24.27725
DJF 207.529367
DKK 7.472187
DOP 74.036755
DZD 151.701403
EGP 55.178208
ERN 17.516003
ETB 181.436568
FJD 2.653439
FKP 0.865179
GBP 0.867468
GEL 3.135342
GGP 0.865179
GHS 12.512243
GIP 0.865179
GMD 85.244859
GNF 10207.159118
GTQ 8.955732
GYD 244.444559
HKD 9.093789
HNL 30.863307
HRK 7.533161
HTG 152.997091
HUF 384.662843
IDR 19567.652342
ILS 3.701161
IMP 0.865179
INR 104.936969
IQD 1529.730922
IRR 49190.775052
ISK 147.14568
JEP 0.865179
JMD 184.961858
JOD 0.827873
JPY 183.093613
KES 150.637854
KGS 102.110705
KHR 4699.541498
KMF 493.362167
KPW 1050.974811
KRW 1693.038758
KWD 0.358726
KYD 0.973636
KZT 596.23587
LAK 25223.044483
LBP 104570.537291
LKR 362.317341
LRD 209.605577
LSL 19.221652
LTL 3.448013
LVL 0.70635
LYD 6.323314
MAD 10.760082
MDL 19.534691
MGA 5365.735913
MKD 61.521478
MMK 2452.108424
MNT 4155.320875
MOP 9.369194
MRU 46.382552
MUR 54.287458
MVR 18.041111
MWK 2027.185166
MXN 20.988942
MYR 4.778952
MZN 74.617885
NAD 19.221069
NGN 1664.277651
NIO 42.955057
NOK 11.769347
NPR 168.12788
NZD 2.023151
OMR 0.448991
PAB 1.168513
PEN 3.927672
PGK 4.984179
PHP 69.209191
PKR 327.05293
PLN 4.208284
PYG 7889.24046
QAR 4.25201
RON 5.088281
RSD 117.29583
RUB 94.000204
RWF 1699.052283
SAR 4.378978
SBD 10.035546
SCR 16.044827
SDG 702.393297
SEK 10.722946
SGD 1.497577
SHP 0.876103
SLE 28.154229
SLL 24486.792495
SOS 667.343712
SRD 44.624949
STD 24169.726386
STN 24.931111
SVC 10.223128
SYP 12912.765755
SZL 19.221003
THB 36.597017
TJS 10.848377
TMT 4.098745
TND 3.376497
TOP 2.811623
TRY 50.253435
TTD 7.921225
TWD 36.755933
TZS 2890.140722
UAH 50.019464
UGX 4209.993769
USD 1.167734
UYU 45.498318
UZS 14024.479419
VES 363.797507
VND 30681.030715
VUV 141.034458
WST 3.241078
XAF 655.644559
XAG 0.014942
XAU 0.000262
XCD 3.155858
XCG 2.105697
XDR 0.814516
XOF 654.523333
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.44581
ZAR 19.207594
ZMK 10511.000303
ZMW 23.337279
ZWL 376.00972
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    2.2900

    82.5

    +2.78%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    -0.2000

    79.39

    -0.25%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.6

    +0.38%

  • RYCEF

    0.1300

    17

    +0.76%

  • GSK

    0.0600

    50.62

    +0.12%

  • RELX

    0.5000

    42.18

    +1.19%

  • RIO

    -0.3500

    84.88

    -0.41%

  • AZN

    0.2000

    95.16

    +0.21%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    23.33

    +0.21%

  • BCC

    -3.4700

    73.47

    -4.72%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.64

    -0.37%

  • BTI

    -0.7700

    53.29

    -1.44%

  • BP

    -0.6900

    33.67

    -2.05%

  • VOD

    0.4400

    13.97

    +3.15%

EV sales rebound in Germany as Chinese brands make inroads
EV sales rebound in Germany as Chinese brands make inroads / Photo: Alexandra BEIER - AFP

EV sales rebound in Germany as Chinese brands make inroads

Electric vehicle sales rebounded strongly in Germany in 2025, official data showed Tuesday, with Chinese manufacturers making inroads from a low base in the EU's largest economy despite tariffs.

Text size:

EV sales rose 43.2 percent last year to 545,142 in total, the KBA federal transport authority said, representing 19.1 percent of all new cars sold.

Chinese EV giant BYD -- which last year overtook Elon Musk's Tesla to become the world's largest electric carmaker -- saw its German sales rise over 700 percent to more than 23,000 cars, giving it 0.8 percent of the overall auto market.

"International vehicle manufacturers with affordable battery electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids have contributed disproportionately to growth in these segments," said Imelda Labbe, head of the VDIK foreign carmakers' lobby in Germany.

The European Union in 2024 introduced higher tariffs on Chinese-made electric cars, alleging that they benefitted from unfair subsidies.

That has not stopped sales of Chinese cars rising across the bloc, with the country's carmakers keen to crack foreign markets amid cut-throat competition at home.

- Electric troubles -

Rising EV sales are also some rare good news for Germany's beleaguered carmakers, which have invested heavily in the technology in recent years, and are seeking to comply with European Union environmental rules.

Though the European Commission in December proposed scrapping a planned 2035 ban on new combustion-engine vehicles, carmakers would still have to cut emissions by 90 percent from 2021 levels under its latest plan, and need to see dramatic sales growth.

The rise in EV sales last year comes after a fall of almost 30 percent in 2024 following the withdrawal of government subsidies, and Germany's electric car market is still smaller than optimists had hoped for.

"We haven't seen a real boom yet," EY analyst Constantin Gall said.

"The hoped-for surge in e-mobility in Germany is proving to be much more protracted and difficult than expected."

After the decline in the market in 2024, the government said in December it would introduce subsidies again.

Some motorists will be able to benefit from 5,000 euros ($5,855) for the purchase of new EVs or hybrids so long as their components are largely made in Germany.

But industry figures say that better charging infrastructure and cheaper power would be needed to really boost EVs and warned that the planned subsidy would have limited impact.

"The state subsidies will only be available to households on low and middle incomes," Gall said. "But it is high-earners who tend to buy new electric cars."

- Tricky times -

Weak sales at home have compounded the challenges facing Germany's car industry.

It was already contending with the costs of investing in EVs and cratering sales in key market China even before US President Donald Trump last year slapped tariffs on cars and auto parts.

Volkswagen, Europe's largest carmaker, is in the process of cutting 35,000 jobs in Germany by 2030 under a deal reached with unions in a bid to slash costs.

Overall car sales in Germany rose just 1.4 percent last year to about 2.9 million vehicles, the KBA said -- roughly 750,000 fewer than were sold in 2019 before the Covid pandemic and Germany's economy sank into stagnation.

"The weak economy, increasing job insecurity and the multitude of political, social and economic crises are taking their toll," Gall said.

K.Inoue--JT