EV grant scheme boost worth £1.3bn expected in Budget

EV grant scheme boost worth £1.3bn expected in Budget

A young woman charges an electric car.

The government is expected to announce an extra £1.3bn in funding for a scheme encouraging the use of electric vehicles (EVs) at next week's Budget.

The Electric Car Grant scheme started in July as part of the move to zero emission vehicles. The government says it has helped 35,000 switch to EVs.

However, early research suggests there is little indication the scheme has attracted entirely new buyers.

There will also be money to create more charging points, and a consultation on helping people without driveways to charge their cars.

It is also possible EV owners could face a new tax elsewhere in Wednesday's Budget in the form of a pay-per-mile charge in future.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander the told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme that subsidising EV sales would support economic growth.

"This is an investment in the country's future... and the good quality manufacturing jobs associated with that," she said, pointing to production of the Nissan Leaf in Sunderland.

"So making sure that we are enabling people to buy a new electric vehicle if that's what they want to do, whilst also investing in charging infrastructure, it is the right long-term decision."

All new cars will have to be electric or hybrid from 2030, when a ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars comes into force.

The Electric Car Grant scheme, which provides a discount of up to £3,750 on eligible vehicles, was launched with an initial fund of £650m.

New AutoMotive, a non-profit organisation supporting the UK's transition to electric vehicles, found in a recent study that the scheme had yet to expand the market for EVs.

EVs covered by the scheme made up 23.8% of new registrations in September, the same as their share before the Electric Car Grant was announced, New Automotive said.

"It isn't yet clear that it's prompting consumers to consider buying cars that they wouldn't have gone ahead and bought anyway," David Farrar, policy manager for New AutoMotive, said at the time.

The Budget is also expected to announce a further £200m for speeding up the rollout of chargepoints across the UK.

Data from Zapmap shows almost 87,000 points across the UK, in about 44,000 locations. Those include places like supermarket car parks and lamppost chargers.

"The proposed funding will support the creation of thousands of charge points and provide extra resources for local authorities to ramp up charging infrastructure on local streets - making it easier for everyone to access reliable charging, including those without off-street parking," the government said.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves, it added, was "expected to publish a consultation on Permitted Development Rights to make it easier and cheaper for people without a driveway to charge".

However, it is also possible that EV owners could face a new tax in the Budget in the form of a pay-per-mile charge from 2028 to mirror the fuel duty that drivers of petrol and diesel cars pay.

The shift towards electric vehicles means the government will get less revenue from fuel duties in the coming years.

The transport secretary did not rule out a new tax on EV drivers' road use, saying support for the transition to EVs needed to be balanced with a "fair vehicle taxation system for all motorists".

"EV [drivers], like drivers of petrol and diesel cars, are driving on roads that require maintenance."

"We've got ageing infrastructure, motorways that were built back in the sixties and seventies," Alexander said.

"We need to have a fair taxation system that is future-focused, but we're not going to do anything to jeopardise the transition to electric vehicles," she said.

Reeves is being urged not to raise taxes on drivers overall, with campaigners preparing to deliver a petition to Downing Street early next week which calls for fuel duty, long frozen, not to be increased.

A line chart titled “Charging electric cars at home is cheaper”, showing the estimated average cost per mile for battery electric vehicles (BEVs) using different charging methods, and for petrol and diesel cars, from September 2021 to November 2025. BEV costs are based on using one charger type for comparison but drivers often use a mix of chargers. For a BEV powered by a home charger, it cost 6p per mile in September 2021. That rose to 10p per mile by early 2023, then fall back to 6p again before reaching 8p per mile by November 2025. For a BEV powered by a rapid charger, it cost 10p per mile in September 2021. That rose to 24p per mile by late 2023, before reaching 25p per mile by November 2025. For a BEV powered by an ultra-rapid charger, it cost 11p per mile in September 2021. That rose to 24p per mile by late 2023, before reaching 25p per mile by November 2025. For a diesel car, it cost 16p per mile in September 2021. That briefly rose to 21p in mid-2022, before settling back to 16p by November 2025. For a petrol car, it cost 15p per mile in September 2021. That briefly rose to 19p in mid-2022, before settling back to 15p by November 2025. The source is RAC Charge Watch.

Richard Holden, the shadow transport secretary, said that "handing out £1.5bn in EV subsidies while hard-working taxpayers are squeezed dry" was "madness".

"Ordinary families are facing increased taxes and spiralling inflation under Labour, yet the government's priority is handing out discounts on new electric cars," the Conservative MP said.

Reeves is expected to increase some taxes in the Budget after saying she means to bring down NHS waiting lists, the national debt and the cost of living.

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Mr. Lee

Mr. Lee is a passionate writer with a deep appreciation for exploring diverse subjects. His curiosity and thoughtful perspective allow him to engage with a wide range of topics, bringing clarity and insight to his work.

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