Budget 2024 Invest now SIMI calls for extension of EV incentives and investment in charging infrastructure

31/08/2023

The Society of the Irish Motor Industry (SIMI) today released their official 232 new vehicle registrations statistics for August. New car registrations for the month of August were down 0.3% (8,131) when compared to August 2022 (8,154). Registrations year to date are up 18.3% (112,729) on the same period last year (95,269). Brian Cooke, SIMI Director General commenting: “This year’s new car market has two notable features; the return to pre-pandemic sales levels and the ever increasing share of electric vehicles. EVs registered for the first eight months of the year have broken the 20,000 barrier. This should only be viewed as a start. We have yet to return to new car sales levels that will reduce the age of the national fleet. We need to see an even greater levels of EV sales, both new and used, if we want to get close to the Government’s Climate Action ambitions. As a country we can’t control the international political and economic situation, however we can control our own local taxation and incentive regime. If we get this right, we can create a platform to give consumers and businesses more options to make better environmental choices. For this to happen, the Industry and its customers need stability and certainty. In this context, SIMI is calling on Government in the forthcoming Budget to extend current EV incentives and not to increase VRT. For consumers this means continuation of the SEAI grants and VRT relief on EVs, while for businesses an extension of the Benefit-in-Kind reliefs for three more years. In addition, there should be increased funding to support the national charging infrastructure. By doing this, we will see an increase in both the new car market and in EV sales, with the potential to create an active used EV market over the next couple of years. These measures would support Government in a number of ways; increase revenue from new car sales, protect employment and reduce emissions from the national fleet.”