European car sales grow in March as EV rise offsets combustion engine decline

(Reuters) – Strong sales of electric vehicles more than offset diminishing sales of petrol and diesel cars in March, pushing ​up new car sales in Europe as Tesla extended ‌a comeback, official data showed on Thursday.

Overall car registrations, a proxy for sales, in the European Union, Britain and the European Free Trade Association were up ​11.1% to 1,581,169 vehicles sold in the month, according to ​the European auto lobby ACEA.

That is the best year-on-year gain ⁠in 23 months, since April 2024’s 12% increase.

ELECTRIFIED VEHICLES MAKE ​UP NEARLY 70% OF REGISTRATIONS

Having risen by about 15% both in January ​and February, registrations of battery electric vehicles jumped by around 42% in March, a sign that consumers could be shunning internal combustion engines over fuel price rises ​due to the Iran war.

The trend was noticeable in Germany, France ​and Italy, among others, where registrations of battery electric vehicles grew by about 66%, ‌69% ⁠and 72%, respectively.

Sales of plug-in hybrids in the region followed closely, with a near 32% annual gain, while petrol and diesel cars continued their decline with drops of about 10% and 14% respectively.

That means ​electrified vehicles, either ​battery-electric, plug-in hybrid ⁠or hybrid, accounted for about 70% of all registrations.

TESLA OVERTAKES BYD

Tesla scored a striking 84.3% year-on-year increase – ​after resuming growth in February for the first time ​in more ⁠than a year – and overtook Chinese competitor BYD, though the latter’s sales also rose sharply.

Registrations of BYD cars grew 147.6% in March to 37,580 ⁠units, ​shy of Tesla’s 52,600.

Sales of legacy car ​makers Volkswagen, Stellantis and Renault grew by 4.8%, 6% and 3.4% respectively, while those ​of BMW climbed 15.4%.

Reporting by Javi West Larrañaga; Editing by Philippa Fletcher