Today, we at BloombergNEF published our annual Electric Vehicle Outlook. The report looks at
how the different segments of road transport could evolve over the coming
decades and maps the impact on oil markets, electricity demand, batteries,
metals and materials, charging infrastructure and greenhouse gas emissions.
There’s a lot of different angles within a big report
like this. Here are a few I’d like to highlight:
EV sales will surge in the coming years
The share of electric vehicles in sales of new
passenger vehicles is set to more than double globally in the next few years —
to 30% in 2026. Their penetration in some markets will be even higher, with EVs
reaching 89% of sales in the Nordics, 52% in China and 42% in Europe. Our
latest near-term EV sales outlook is brighter than what BNEF published last
year, mostly due to policy changes in the US, where a major investment push
sparked by the Inflation Reduction Act will help more than triple the share of
EVs in new sales, to 28% by 2026.
Peaks everywhere
Sales of combustion-engine vehicles peaked six years
ago and are now in long-term decline. Oil demand from road transport is also
very close to cresting.
EVs of all types are already displacing 1.5 million
barrels of oil a day. This will increase dramatically in the coming years,
leading to demand for road fuels peaking in 2027. Uptake in the US and Europe
has already crested, while it’s expected to peak in China next year. Oil demand
from two-wheelers, three-wheelers and buses has also peaked, with demand from
passenger cars following in 2025. Commercial vehicles will take longer to shift
as heavy trucks continue to rely largely on diesel.
Battery factory spending ahead of plan
BNEF models two main scenarios in its EV outlook. The
Economic Transition Scenario — which assumes no new policies and regulations
are enacted — is primarily driven by techno-economic trends and market forces.
The Net Zero Scenario investigates what a potential route to net-zero emissions
by the middle of the century looks like for the road transport sector.
Large investments are needed in all areas of the
battery supply chain, but some areas are already running ahead of what’s
required to stay on track to eliminate emissions by 2050. BNEF estimates that
between $24 billion and $57 billion in battery and component plant investment
is needed each year to keep up with demand. It’s looking good: Spending already
totaled $59 billion in 2022.
Lithium has a supply challenge
Lithium is the most concerning of the battery metals
in terms of supply, with demand increasing 22 times by 2050 under BNEF’s Net
Zero Scenario.
Building more public chargers can help consumers feel
comfortable with shorter EV ranges and smaller battery packs — which in turn
reduces pressure on the supply chain. While battery recycling will also help,
it won’t deliver large volumes until the 2030s.
Still, there are reasons for optimism. Sodium-ion ion
batteries, which are entering commercialization this year, could reduce lithium
demand by nearly 40% in 2035 compared to BNEF’s base case scenario. Advances
like solid-state batteries and next-generation anodes are also entering the
market.
Electricity demand from EVs
The rising adoption of EVs adds about 14% to global
electricity demand by 2050 in the Economic Transition Scenario and only 12% in
the Net Zero Scenario — despite more vehicles on the road. That’s because the
Net Zero Scenario includes additional consumption from electrification of
heating, industry as well as electrolyzer use for hydrogen production in other
sectors.
This year’s report includes five new thematic
highlights, each of which explores a different part of the transition in
markets around the world. The topics are:
- EV price parity
under different battery price scenarios
- Will average EV
ranges keep rising?
- Emerging
battery technologies: sodium-ion batteries, solid-state batteries, and
next-generation anode technologies
- High-powered
charging for trucking fleets
- The impact of
autonomous vehicles
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