Canberra has announced
its preferred model for the standard, which it committed to in last year’s
budget after releasing its electric vehicle (EV) strategy last April. Manufacturers will be set an average carbon
dioxide (CO2) target for the range of vehicles they produce, which will be
lowered over time to mandate the sale of more fuel-efficient, low or zero
emissions vehicles.
Credits will be
available to manufacturers that exceed their emissions target that can be
traded to other suppliers or used in future years, while those who fail to meet
the requirement must make it up over the following two-year period, pay a
penalty or acquire credits.
Three separate options will be surveyed — an aggressive action aiming to reach existing US
standards around 2026, then bringing forward US targets for 2029-31 to the
Australian scheme in 2028 and 2029, a “slow start” option to reach the US
standard’s rate of decline over five years and its preferred model of a
catch-up” standard that reaches the US target by 2028 but does not exceed it.
The government has
said Australia has been a dumping ground for auto manufacturers’ inefficient
vehicles, maintaining the changes will push manufacturers to give Australian
customers a greater choice of products that use less fuel.
The Federal Chamber of
Automotive Industries (FCAI) said the industry will take time to study the
standard’s potential cost impacts on consumers and the wider industry.
The Labor government came to power promising
stronger climate action, saying transport could be responsible for the bulk of Australia’s
emissions by 2030 without action to boost EV and low emissions vehicle sales.
Transport makes up
98mn t/yr or 21pc of Australia’s total greenhouse gas emissions, with
government figures showing that on average passenger cars in Australia emit at
a rate 20pc higher than the US’ vehicle fleet. Passenger cars contribute 41mn
t/yr of CO2 equivalent (CO2e), or 42pc of all transport emissions, with light
commercial vehicles emitting 18mn t/yr CO2e or 18pc of total transport
emissions.
Australia’s preference
for large vehicles means SUVs and light commercial vehicle models accounted for
78.4pc of sales and comprised all the top 10 vehicles sold in Australia during
2023. EVs comprised 7.2pc, with combined battery electric, plug-in hybrid and
hybrid vehicles representing 16.2pc of new vehicle sales.
Fuel consumption has rebounded from Covid-19
pandemic lockdowns with travel returning to normal levels and a population boom following the reopening of
borders. Australia’s gasoline sales averaged 276,000 b/d during
January-November 2023, according to Australian Petroleum Statistics, compared
with 274,000 b/d a year earlier and 298,000 b/d for the same period in 2019.
Total oil product consumption rose to a new record in November, raising the
year-to-date average daily consumption to 1.044mn b/d, higher than 2019’s
1.042mn b/d.
Tags: Carbon dioxide, EVs, Fuel efficiency, Standard