Honda Downshifts on Its EV Goals Amid Trade, Sales Woes
Japanese automaker Honda is scaling back its once-ambitious electric vehicle investment and sales targets in light of changing emissions regulations and the unsteady international trade environment affecting the largest markets served by the automobile industry.
At the company's annual business briefing in Tokyo on May 20, Honda CEO Toshihiro Mibe revealed plans to erase nearly 30% of its original multi-trillion-Yen investments, dialing down its EV and software research and development budget from ten trillion yen (~$68.97 billion) to seven trillion yen (~$48.28 billion).
The CEO stated that the budget shift comes as auto emissions regulations in North America and Europe have loosened at the same time that trade restrictions make selling cars a more unpredictable business.
"It has become increasingly clear that the environmental regulations, which held promise for the widespread adoption of EVs, are becoming relaxed, mainly in the U.S. and Europe," Mibe said. "In addition, the recent development in trade policies of various countries makes our business environment increasingly uncertain."
The figurehead also predicted that the onset of the Trump Administration and its attitude toward electric car-friendly policies like the IRA tax credits and the loosening of EPA fuel economy standards will stunlock EV demand for some time, even after a new president takes the seat at the Resolute desk.
On May 19, U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy announced that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) recently submitted the interpretive rule, "Resetting the Corporate Average Fuel Economy Program (CAFE)," to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs for review. In a statement, Duffy claimed that the Biden administration overreached the government's legal authority by including electric vehicles in setting fuel economy guidelines for automakers, which were set to increase to 50.4 miles per gallon by 2031 from the current 39.1 mpg for light-duty vehicles.
As a result, Mibe is now shooting for EVs to account for 20% of the automaker's sales by 2030. Previously, Honda had a target of 30% by the end of the decade, and it now expects to sell just 700,000 EVs among reduced sales goals of 3.75 million cars in 2030.
"If the EV penetration period is pushed back a little, I feel that it will be pushed back by about five years, especially in North America," Mibe said. "The Trump administration will remain in power for four years, but that doesn't mean that EV demand will bounce back immediately. I think it will be pushed back by about five to six years."
In lieu of its EV evolution with models like the Honda Prologue and Acura ZDX, gas-electric hybrid vehicles like the hybrid versions of models like the Accord, Civic, and CR-V are making the biggest sales dent amongst its selection of electrified vehicle offerings both in the U.S. and around the world.
Data from American Honda shows that in 2024, Honda and Acura sold 40,408 Prologues and ZDXs, but at the same time, over 308,254 hybrid Civics, Accords, and CR-Vs were sold in the United States. Though Honda's worldwide sales took a 4.6% dip to 3.81 million vehicles in 2024, it sold 64,444 EVs and 868,265 hybrids, accounting for 23% of its global sales.
Mibe's May 20 announcement signaled that the brand is doubling down on its gas-electric hybrid technology. He said that starting in 2027, Honda will reveal 13 new hybrid cars underpinned by a next-generation hybrid vehicle platform over the next four years. Specifically in North America, this new next-gen hybrid system will find its way onto its larger offerings, which it claims will improve their towing and rough-terrain driving capabilities.
The Honda CEO claims that the upcoming hybrid platform will be at least 10% more fuel efficient than Honda's 2018 hybrids and will cost half as much to build. Furthermore, Mibe said that its customers aren't entirely sold on EVs over hybrids or pure gas cars just yet, noting that "the main reason why customers have not yet jumped on the EV bandwagon" is that they see "the value of battery-electric vehicles is not yet equal to or greater than the value of the existing hybrid or plug-in hybrid vehicles."
Though the situation sounds as if a demoralized Honda is giving up on EV technology research and development for good, Mibe said it'll take this lull period as an opportunity to improve its future offerings.
"We should take advantage of this period and take the technological evolution to another level, so that customers can buy our BEVs and we will be able to make a profit," Mibe said. "We will take these difficult times as an opportunity to advance our technology one more cycle, and create value that surpasses the current gasoline-powered cars and HVs within five years."
I am no automotive executive, but I think that Toyota has a slight edge over Honda because of its fearlessness in making hybrids fairly mainstream. The 2025 Camry is one great example, as all trims, including the base LE model, come with a hybrid engine.
Believe it or not, Honda is the first automaker in the United States to sell a hybrid vehicle. The first-generation Insight went on sale in the U.S. in December 1999, and seven months later, the first Toyota Prius was released. I hope that the decision Honda makes at this point builds on the legacy they already have.
Copyright 2025 The Arena Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Hashtags

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


Wall Street Journal
17 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
10-Year Treasury Yield Heads Toward Largest Decline Since April 14
1316 ET — The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note is headed toward its biggest one-day decline since April 14 after a pair of lackluster reports on the U.S. economy. Yields, which fall when bond prices rise, began sliding early in the session after the ADP's National Employment report showed that 37,000 jobs were created in May, the slowest pace of private-sector hiring in two years. Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal projected hiring would increase by 110,000 new jobs. Yields extended their decline after an ISM services report, which suggested that activity among service firms fell unexpectedly in May. The survey's index for new orders and inventories both sank into contraction, with respondents reporting difficulty in planning due to uncertain tariff policies. The 10-year yield recently traded near 4.36%, down from 4.46% Tuesday. ( 0841 ET – An ominous sign from the U.S. labor market triggers a rush to Treasury bonds, driving yields sharply lower. ADP says only 37,000 jobs were created by private employers in May, the lowest since March 2023. Economists surveyed by WSJ expected 110,000. ADP revises the April figure to 60,000 from 62,000 and says hiring is losing momentum while pay growth remained at robust levels. The report may reflect businesses reluctance to hire amid tariffs uncertainty. Trump cites the report to call on the Fed to lower rates. Friday, payrolls are expected to slow a little from April. The 10-year is at 4.419% and the two-year at 3.931%. ( @ptrevisani)
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Gold Turns Higher on Increased Uncertainty
Gold prices gain as comments from President Trump instill some new economic worries heading into the summer. Trump posted on his Truth Social account that China's President Xi was "extremely hard to make a deal with," and also demanded Fed Chair Jerome Powell lower interest rates.


The Hill
17 minutes ago
- The Hill
Doug Ford urges Canada's leader to ramp up tariffs on US
Ontario Premier Doug Ford is pressuring Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney to ramp up tariffs against the United States after President Trump doubled tariffs on steel and aluminum earlier this week. 'I highly recommended to the prime minister directly that we slap another 25 percent on top of our tariffs to equal President Trump's tariffs on our steel,' Ford said during his Wednesday appearance on CNN's 'Situation Room.' 'He has to, he has to start looking around the world at China and other locations that are taking Chinese steel and really stop the flow of steel. That's the problem,' Ford told host Wolf Blitzer. 'Canada is not the problem. Again. We purchased 30 billion, with a 'B,' of steel off the US, and that's going to come to an end real quick.' Trump signed the executive order to hike the tariffs on Tuesday. The measure went into effect on Wednesday and would levy steel and aluminum tariffs on almost all imports to the U.S.. The United Kingdom is exempt as it inked a trade deal with Washington last month. Canada has retaliated against the U.S. previously, slapping a 25 percent reciprocal tariff on U.S. aluminum and steel products. Carney, who met with Trump at the White House in early May, did not express readiness to implement Ford's suggestion. 'We will take some time, not much, some time because we are in intensive discussions right now with the Americans on the trading relationship,' Carney said to reporters on Wednesday, according to Politico. 'Those discussions are progressing. I would note that the American action is a global action. It's not one targeted in Canada, so we will take some time, but not more,' the prime minister said. Ontario is open to imposing its own countermeasures, according to Ford. When asked on Wednesday if willing to bring back the electricity surcharge, he told reporters that 'everything's on the table.' Ontario implemented a 25 percent extra charge on the electricity Canada exports to three U.S. states after Trump threatened to double tariffs on steel and aluminum. Ford eventually spoke to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and later suspended the tax impacting Michigan, New York and Minnesota.