Although
the costs of EVs and current cars will be the same for motorists
by 2018, manufacturers will not reach parity until 2023, when they will
make 5pc margins on EVs - about equal to the profit on current vehicles.
EVs matching the cost of conventionally fuelled cars sooner than
expected will send a seismic shock throughout the sector, from
manufacturers right down through their supply chains, with UBS warning
“the 'time to get ready' and win in the space shrinks”.
It also warns that the aftermarket for replacement parts could be
radically disrupted because electric drivetrains suffer less wear than
traditional engines.
“Our detailed analysis of moving and wearing parts has shown that the
highly lucrative spare parts business should shrink by ~60pc in the
end-game of a 100pc EV world, which is decades away,” UBS said.
It also
forecast tech companies grabbing a bigger slice of the industry, with
the deconstruction of the Bolt revealing that its electronics content
was $4,000 higher than in an internal combustion engines, excluding the
battery.
Professor
David Bailey, car industry expert at Aston University, said: “If this
really is the moment that the car industry reaches parity then the
inflexion point is far earlier than anyone was expecting.”
Ian Fletcher, principal automotive analyst at IHS Markit, added: “We
are not going to see the death of diesel or petrol anytime soon but
manufacturers are weighing up the investment cost of traditional engines
against electric, as well as the levies they face over the emissions of
their fleets.”
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