Global electric vehicle registrations have crossed the 20 million mark, a milestone that underscores the accelerating shift away from fossil-fuel-powered transport. According to The Driven, the key driver behind this surge is not only growing consumer awareness but also tightening global oil supplies, which are making the cost advantage of EVs more tangible for everyday drivers.
Despite a notable slowdown in the world's two largest EV markets — China and the United States — overall global growth has remained robust. This suggests that the adoption wave is broadening, with emerging and mid-sized markets in Europe, Southeast Asia, and Latin America picking up significant momentum.
The running cost argument is increasingly compelling: electricity is cheaper per kilometre than petrol or diesel in virtually every major market, and the gap is widening as oil supply constraints put upward pressure on fuel prices. Analysts note that this economic calculus is now resonating beyond early adopters and reaching mainstream buyers.
Forecasts cited by The Driven indicate that electric vehicles could represent close to one in three cars sold globally within the next twelve months. If realised, this would mark a historic inflection point for the automotive industry and accelerate the structural decline in global oil demand.
Source: “Cheaper to run:” Global EV numbers surge above 20 million despite slowdown in biggest markets - The Driven· Based on source, with AI-assisted rewriting.
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