The Australasian Fleet Management Association (AfMA) says it will soon be releasing its report on electric vehicles in the business fleet.
It says early insights show that 29% of respondents declare their EV journey as mature whilst 49% say they are starting out.
The report includes responses from 177 different small, medium and large organisations who are collectively responsible for more than 65,000 vehicles.
AfMA says in 2019, EV sales increased by 200% – but it is asking if Australia’s government holding the nation back from an even quicker transition?
That’s one potential message out of the Electric Vehicle Council’s 2020 annual document – State of Electric Vehicles says AfMA.
According to available data in the EV council report – which excludes Tesla sales – fleet sales made up 49% of purchases in 2019 with the remainder being private purchases.
“The last year has seen an increase in electric vehicle sales, improvements in consumer sentiment, and the rollout of public charging infrastructure. A number of states and territories have announced new policies to support electric vehicles,” the EV Council report says.
“However, Australia continues to lag comparable countries when it comes to electric vehicle market share, model availability, consumer awareness, industry development, and – critically – government support.”
It appears consumer support is rising with 56% of surveyed consumers considering an electric vehicle for their next purchase.
More than 3,226 electric vehicles have already sold within Australia in the first half of this year, displaying a promising appetite for the future of environmentally sustainable vehicles.
ACT has risen as an unlikely embracer of EV vehicles, despite the federal government’s lack of movement on issues such as policy reform or buyer incentives.
“There is a real opportunity here for the ACT to take the lead nationally in electric vehicles because the policy building blocks are already in place,” EV Council CEO Behyad Jafari says.
“What you have in Canberra is a defined city with an environmentally aware and tech-savvy car public. There is generally good job stability – although that concept has taken a hit across the country with the coronavirus – and reasonable levels of disposable income.”
As a percentage of new cars sold, the ACT outpaced all other state or territories with 83 electric vehicles per 10,000 combustion vehicles sold. Victoria, Queensland and NSW currently hover around the mid-20s.
Electric vehicle sales globally are between 2.5 to 5% of all vehicle sales, with the notable exception of Norway where electric vehicles accounted for 56% of its fleet.
Australia’s electric vehicle fleet proportion sits at 0.6% says the EV Council report.