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Sales of electric vehicles soar on major European markets as drivers avoid expensive petrol

In the first quarter of 2026 sales of electric cars jumped almost a third on the main European auto markets, as consumers sought alternatives to combustion engines after the war in Iran caused the highest spike in petrol prices for years.

Data collected by the trade association E-Mobility Europe, and research firm, New Automotive, on Monday showed that new battery-electric vehicle registrations (BEVs), a proxy of sales, increased 29.4% in comparison to a year earlier, reaching almost 560,000 during the first quarter. They were also up 51.3% in March, with over 240,000 vehicles registered in 15 European markets.

The ACEA auto lobby has revealed that last year, these markets accounted 94% of BEV'sales? in the European Union, and the European Free Trade Association. These countries are aligned with EU laws regulating CO2 emissions.

In a recent statement, E-Mobility Europe secretary general Chris Heron stated that "March's surge in electric car sales is one of Europe's largest recent gains in energy safety in a time when oil dependency has become a vulnerability."

According to a joint statement by the two organisations, the half-million BEVs that were registered in the quarter would be enough to reduce oil usage by 2,000,000 barrels per annum.

It said that the five biggest EV'markets' in Europe - Germany France Spain Italy and Poland -- have seen BEV sales grow by more than 40% this year. The report estimated that 21,2% of new 'cars' registered in EU and EFTA were electric.

New Automotive, in an earlier report, published in April, said that BEV registrations in Britain, Europe's largest BEV market, after Germany, increased 12.8% during the first quarter. This was also helped by the rising price of petrol, and represented 22.5% new car sales.

(source: Reuters)