
Queensland axes its 2026 EV-only government fleet mandate
Queensland has killed off the previous Labor state government's mandate to replace all eligible government passenger cars with zero-emissions vehicles by December 2026.
In its place, the state's Liberal National Party (LNP) government has released a new strategy that sets a smaller 10 per cent emissions reduction target across the entire public service fleet by 2030, rather than focusing on replacing individual vehicles with EVs.
The Sunshine State's public works, housing and youth minister Sam O'Connor said the Queensland Government's broader approach to cutting vehicle emissions across its entire fleet would have a bigger impact on total CO2 emissions and give public servants more freedom to purchase the type of QFleet vehicles they need.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Supplied Credit: CarExpert
In a press release late last week, Mr O'Connor said Labor's EV-only policy for eligible passenger vehicles only covered around 3600 vehicles across government, yet QFleet operates more than 11,000 vehicles as part of frontline services including nursing, housing, child safety and youth justice.
The Queensland Government said the updated policy, which allows for fit-for-purpose vehicles whether they are all-electric, hybrid or plug-in hybrid, will reduce emissions to their lowest ever levels while the public service fleet experiences unprecedented growth.
It says the new approach will also provide more time for agencies to install charging infrastructure while still delivering on a 10 per cent tailpipe emissions reduction target by 2030, which Mr O'Connor said will equate to 3.33 kilotonnes of CO2.
'This represents around 63 per cent reduction in emissions from what QFleet's emissions were in 2005,' he said.
'We're not here to tick boxes – we're here to focus on outcomes.
'We've laid out a genuine pathway to reduce tailpipe emissions and better support the hardworking public servants who rely on QFleet to get them to where they need to be.' Supplied Credit: CarExpert
As part of the Queensland government's new QFleet Vehicle Emissions Reduction Strategy 2025-2030, there will be annual fleet reviews, improved journey planning and the use of lower-emissions E10 fuels, and each agency will be held accountable for reducing their emissions.
'Our new strategy moves beyond simply mandating one type of vehicle for procurement,' said Mr O'Connor.
'At the same time as our emissions will be decreasing, our fleet will see annual growth of around 1.5 per cent per year – equating to around 9 per cent growth over the period of the 10 per cent reduction in emissions.
'That means while our fleet will be larger than ever, our emissions will be lower than ever.
'Unlike the previous mandate, we're reducing QFleet's tailpipe emissions in a practical, sustainable way, which responds to feedback from public servants across Queensland.
'QFleet is leading by example to help Queensland achieve net zero.' Supplied Credit: CarExpert
The Queensland Government's move was swiftly welcomed by the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI), which has been vocal in its criticism of EV mandates and the federal government's New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES) in particular.
Echoing claims by Toyota that multiple powertrain electrification technologies – led by hybrids in its case – have a larger overall impact on total new-vehicle CO2 reduction than EVs, FCAI chief executive Tony Weber described the 2025-2030 QFleet emissions reduction plan as 'a balanced and realistic approach to decarbonising the state's transport fleet'.
'The Queensland Government has recognised that the best pathway for emissions reduction is to utilise a range of vehicle technologies rather than focusing solely on battery electric vehicles,' Mr Weber said.
'Since the introduction of the Commonwealth Government's New Vehicle Efficiency Standard earlier this year, we have more information and evidence regarding the challenges of shifting to a lower-emission fleet of vehicles on Australian roads. Supplied Credit: CarExpert
'Right now, Australian consumers remain hesitant to the change even though more than 90 battery-electric vehicles are available.
'The Queensland Government has listened to its QFleet customers and recognised that it can provide more choice while still delivering meaningful emissions reductions.
'It reflects the real-world challenges of vehicle deployment and provides more time for development of the infrastructure needed to underpin long-term change.'
Queensland's previous Zero Emission Vehicle Action Plan 2022-2024 was just one part of the Zero Emission Vehicle strategy 2022-2032 announced by the former Labor state government in March 2022.
As part of its 'commitment to support Queensland's shift to zero net emissions by 2050', the state's 10-year emissions reduction strategy also called for 50 per cent of new passenger vehicle sales in the state to be zero-emissions by 2030, before moving to 100 per cent by 2036. Supplied Credit: CarExpert
It also called for every new TransLink-funded bus added to the fleet to be a zero-emissions vehicle in South East Queensland by 2025, and across regional Queensland by 2030.
The Queensland LNP has repeatedly distanced itself from the previous Labor government's ambitious climate policies since it came to power in October 2024.
Soon after he became premier, David Crisafulli announced the state would support the federal government's 2050 net zero emissions plan but would reject set renewables targets by dropping requirements for milestones along the way.
The LNP also axed an 'unviable' multi-billion-dollar pumped hydro project planned for Mackay, and cancelled the $1 billion Moonlight Wind Farm project, while opening more opportunities for gas and coal development in the northern state.
Queensland's rollback of public service EV mandates comes after US President Donald Trump in January removed his predecessor's mandate for half of all new-vehicle purchases to be EVs by 2030.
And just last week President Trump signed congressional resolutions overturning California's ability to mandate EV sales and establish its emissions standards via a federal waiver, immediately halting the state's 2035 ban on new combustion-powered vehicle sales. Supplied Credit: CarExpert
In addition, California will be unable to enforce an increase in zero-emission heavy-duty truck sales, or a low-nitrogen oxide regulation for heavy-duty highway and off-road vehicles.
However, 17 other states accounting for 30 per cent of the US auto market have also adopted some or all of California's stricter vehicle emissions standards, and many of them are joining the legal appeal flagged last month by California Governor Gavin Newsom.
Apart from Queensland, several other Australian states also effectively have EV 'road maps', with the nation's largest two by population – New South Wales and Victoria – both aiming for zero-emissions vehicles to account for at least 50 per cent of all new light vehicle sales in each state by 2030.
Australians bought a record 91,292 new EVs in 2024, accounting for 7.4 per cent of the 1.237 million new vehicles sold in this country last year.
MORE: Toyota says its hybrids have saved nine million EVs worth of CO2MORE: Q&A with FCAI chief Tony WeberMORE: The fastest charging EVs in Australia
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


7NEWS
2 hours ago
- 7NEWS
2026 Ford Ranger Super Duty: Initial pricing and specs detailed for more capable ute
The 2026 Ford Ranger Super Duty will start from $82,990 before on-road costs – before a tray is fitted – when it goes on sale in local showrooms in early 2026. The Ranger Super Duty – using the Super Duty name applied to the most capable Ford trucks sold in North America – comes with the highest towing and payload capabilities of any Ranger offered to date. It gives the Ranger – the best-selling vehicle in Australia for the past two years – a uniquely capable option against key rival Toyota HiLux and newcomers like the Kia Tasman and BYD Shark 6. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Ford has announced pricing for the Single Cab-Chassis, Super Cab-Chassis and Double Cab-Chassis body styles which will be the first Super Duty models on sale. The company has already confirmed the Ranger Super Duty Pickup and XLT Super Duty will follow on, joining the initial cab/chassis models in Ford Australia showrooms in late 2026. 'The Ranger Super Duty project was about pushing the boundaries of what a mid-size truck can achieve,' Drew O'Shannassy, Ranger Super Duty program supervisor said in a statement. 'We focused relentlessly on core capability – increasing GVM (Gross Vehicle Mass), GAWR (Gross Axle Weight Rating), and towing capacity – while ensuring the truck remains incredibly durable and easy to operate in challenging environments. 'The unique calibration of the V6 diesel ensures that crucial torque is available right where our customers need it for heavy loads, while meeting modern emissions standards.' The cab/chassis pricing doesn't include a tray, with Ford offering three different types: a galvanised steel tray, body colour steel tray or a matte black steel tray. The Ranger Super Duty Single Cab-Chassis will be $82,990 before on-road costs with an official licensed Ford tray adding between $7121 to $9376 including fitment and GST. That brings the total to between $90,111-$92,266 including a fitted tray before on-road costs, with the Super Duty Single Cab-Chassis offering 299mm ground clearance and payload of up to 1982kg. The Ranger Super Duty Super Cab-Chassis – offering more space behind the front seats – will be priced from $86,480, with trays priced from $6296 to $8551 including fitment and GST. This sees the Super Duty Super Cab-Chassis priced between $92,776 and $95,351 including a fitted tray before on-road costs, with 297mm ground clearance and up to 1896kg payload. The Ranger Super Duty Double Cab-Chassis will be $89,990 before on-roads – only $450 less than the Ranger Raptor list price – with trays priced from $5966 to $8166 including fitment. That brings the Super Duty Double Cab-Chassis up to $95,956 with the cheapest tray and $98,156 before on-road costs with the most expensive tray added. It comes with 295mm ground clearance and a payload of up to 1825kg. All three models have a 1710mm track width – matching that of the Ranger Raptor, which is 90mm wider than the rest of the Ranger lineup – and a braked towing capacity of 4500kg. They also have a front axle load rating of 1900kg and a rear axle load rating of 2800kg – compared to a best of 1450kg front and 1959kg rear on other model grades including Ranger XLT dual-cab. Ford says it has upgraded the cooling system for the Super Duty to improve performance and reliability with its increased towing as well as its higher 4500kg GVM (Gross Vehicle Mass) and 8000kg GCM (Gross Combined Mass). The size increase also gives the Super Duty 50mm higher water wading capability, with all three trim levels announced so far boasting 850mm water wading. The Super Duty lineup will use the 3.0-litre V6 turbo-diesel engine already offered in other model grades, making the same 154kW at 3250rpm and 600Nm at 1750rpm. Arctic White is included in the list price, with Seismic Tan – unique to Super Duty models – Shadow Black, Command Grey and Aluminium Metallic available for an additional $750. Ford said it will add Traction Green to the options list in late 2026 when the Double-Cab pickup and XLT Super Duty variant arrive. Ford will release more details, including full dimensions, ahead of the Ranger Super Duty's early 2026 arrival in local dealers.


Perth Now
2 hours ago
- Perth Now
After-hours GPs, tax relief pitch in budget reply
Grants of $150,000 for GP clinics to offer after-hours services, stamp duty relief for first homebuyers and support for drought-stricken farmers are central to a Liberal opposition's pitch for government. In the South Australian parliament on Tuesday, Opposition Leader Vincent Tarzia responded to the Malinauskas government's June 5 budget, in a speech that was also a pitch to voters before the state election in March. The budget was "arrogant and visionless" and was filled with "spin, debt, broken promises and bad priorities", he said. "The cost of living is crushing, home ownership is slipping out of reach, our health system is under incredible pressure, crime is spiralling and our regions are in drought, desperate for support," Mr Tarzia said. Meanwhile, "Party Pete" was "riding the wave of event after event, often on the taxpayer dime", he said in reference to Premier Peter Malinauskas. "The likes of Sam Smith, Greg Norman, Katy Perry … that's where he's most comfortable," he said. Mr Tarzia announced a two-year trial to offer $150,000 grants to GP clinics to help cover the cost of opening until 8pm on weekdays and on Sundays. "We will abolish Labor's water bill price hike, we'll scrap Labor's GP payroll tax grab and we'll slash stamp duty for first homebuyers, including on existing homes," he said. First homebuyers purchasing an existing home of up to $1 million would not pay stamp duty, saving up to $48,000 in upfront costs, and the Liberals would also waive the $192 mortgage registration fee. Treasurer Stephen Mullighan's budget was headlined by a $395 million "law and order" package to fund hundreds of extra police officers, but existing commitments to big-ticket road and hospital projects and net debt of $35.5 billion, left it little room to move on big new investments. Mr Tarzia said the government's $73 million drought package provided "little relief" to farmers and regional communities doing it tough. "So far, their response has been nothing but disgraceful," he said. The government needed to create a drought hardship registry, fast-track relief with targeted rebates, subsidise water carting and deliver low or no interest loans for fodder and fertiliser, he said. Mr Tarzia criticised the government on hospital ramping, which was "worse than ever" and broken promises on a $600 million hydrogen plant was shelved to help fund the Whyalla steelworks package.


Perth Now
2 hours ago
- Perth Now
2026 Ford Ranger Super Duty: Initial pricing and specs detailed for more capable ute
The 2026 Ford Ranger Super Duty will start from $82,990 before on-road costs – before a tray is fitted – when it goes on sale in local showrooms in early 2026. The Ranger Super Duty – using the Super Duty name applied to the most capable Ford trucks sold in North America – comes with the highest towing and payload capabilities of any Ranger offered to date. It gives the Ranger – the best-selling vehicle in Australia for the past two years – a uniquely capable option against key rival Toyota HiLux and newcomers like the Kia Tasman and BYD Shark 6. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Ford has announced pricing for the Single Cab-Chassis, Super Cab-Chassis and Double Cab-Chassis body styles which will be the first Super Duty models on sale. The company has already confirmed the Ranger Super Duty Pickup and XLT Super Duty will follow on, joining the initial cab/chassis models in Ford Australia showrooms in late 2026. 'The Ranger Super Duty project was about pushing the boundaries of what a mid-size truck can achieve,' Drew O'Shannassy, Ranger Super Duty program supervisor said in a statement. Supplied Credit: CarExpert 'We focused relentlessly on core capability – increasing GVM (Gross Vehicle Mass), GAWR (Gross Axle Weight Rating), and towing capacity – while ensuring the truck remains incredibly durable and easy to operate in challenging environments. 'The unique calibration of the V6 diesel ensures that crucial torque is available right where our customers need it for heavy loads, while meeting modern emissions standards.' The cab/chassis pricing doesn't include a tray, with Ford offering three different types: a galvanised steel tray, body colour steel tray or a matte black steel tray. Supplied Credit: CarExpert The Ranger Super Duty Single Cab-Chassis will be $82,990 before on-road costs with an official licensed Ford tray adding between $7121 to $9376 including fitment and GST. That brings the total to between $90,111-$92,266 including a fitted tray before on-road costs, with the Super Duty Single Cab-Chassis offering 299mm ground clearance and payload of up to 1982kg. The Ranger Super Duty Super Cab-Chassis – offering more space behind the front seats – will be priced from $86,480, with trays priced from $6296 to $8551 including fitment and GST. This sees the Super Duty Super Cab-Chassis priced between $92,776 and $95,351 including a fitted tray before on-road costs, with 297mm ground clearance and up to 1896kg payload. Supplied Credit: CarExpert The Ranger Super Duty Double Cab-Chassis will be $89,990 before on-roads – only $450 less than the Ranger Raptor list price – with trays priced from $5966 to $8166 including fitment. That brings the Super Duty Double Cab-Chassis up to $95,956 with the cheapest tray and $98,156 before on-road costs with the most expensive tray added. It comes with 295mm ground clearance and a payload of up to 1825kg. All three models have a 1710mm track width – matching that of the Ranger Raptor, which is 90mm wider than the rest of the Ranger lineup – and a braked towing capacity of 4500kg. Supplied Credit: CarExpert They also have a front axle load rating of 1900kg and a rear axle load rating of 2800kg – compared to a best of 1450kg front and 1959kg rear on other model grades including Ranger XLT dual-cab. Ford says it has upgraded the cooling system for the Super Duty to improve performance and reliability with its increased towing as well as its higher 4500kg GVM (Gross Vehicle Mass) and 8000kg GCM (Gross Combined Mass). The size increase also gives the Super Duty 50mm higher water wading capability, with all three trim levels announced so far boasting 850mm water wading. The Super Duty lineup will use the 3.0-litre V6 turbo-diesel engine already offered in other model grades, making the same 154kW at 3250rpm and 600Nm at 1750rpm. Supplied Credit: CarExpert Arctic White is included in the list price, with Seismic Tan – unique to Super Duty models – Shadow Black, Command Grey and Aluminium Metallic available for an additional $750. Ford said it will add Traction Green to the options list in late 2026 when the Double-Cab pickup and XLT Super Duty variant arrive. Ford will release more details, including full dimensions, ahead of the Ranger Super Duty's early 2026 arrival in local dealers. MORE: Everything Ford Ranger