
Electric vehicle sales growth eases to 21% in July
electric vehicle sales
grew 21 per cent year-on-year in July, the slowest rate since January and down from 25 per cent in June, as momentum in
plug-in hybrid sales
in China slackened, market research firm Rho Motion said on Wednesday.
China is the world's biggest car market and accounts for more than half of
global EV sales
, which in Rho Motion's data include
battery-electric vehicles
and plug-in hybrids.
Its overall car sales growth slowed in July, with BYD , the world's largest EV maker, recording its third monthly drop in registrations.
The relatively muted slowdown in overall EV sales however shows other markets are taking up some of the slack, with European sales for one benefiting from incentives aimed at speeding up decarbonisation.
Global sales of battery-electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids rose to 1.6 million units in July, Rho Motion data showed.
China's EV sales growth, which averaged 36 per cent a month in the first half, eased to 12 per cent in July as the previously booming market was dampened by a pause in some 2025 government subsidy schemes for EV and plug-in hybrid purchases, Rho Motion data manager Charles Lester said.
Chinese sales reached around one million vehicles. European sales surged 48 per cent to about 390,000 units, while North American sales climbed 10 per cent to more than 170,000. Sales in the rest of the world jumped 55 per cent to more than 140,000 vehicles.
"Despite regional variations, the overall trajectory for EV adoption in 2025 remains strongly upward," Lester said.
Chinese car sales are expected to return to strong growth from August as new funds become available for its subsidy schemes, while a cut in US tax credits for buying or leasing new EVs at the end of September will hurt demand there, Lester added.

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