Episode

EV Market Surge in Europe as Gas Prices Rise, Chinese Brands Dominate Global Sales

Podcast
Electric Vehicles Industry News
Published
May 21, 2026
Duration seconds
135
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Summary

In the past 48 hours, the electric vehicle industry has shown renewed momentum, but the picture is still uneven across regions. The clearest signal is in Europe, where EV demand has risen as fuel prices climbed amid the Iran conflict. Reuters reported that new EV registrations across Europe increased 34 percent year on year in April, while online searches for new and used EVs also jumped, especially for more affordable Chinese brands. Renault said half of its UK registrations in April were electric, and its UK EV enquiries rose 48 percent since the conflict began. Globally, the International Energy Agency says EVs are on track to make up nearly 30 percent of all car sales in 2026, with about 23 million units expected to be sold this year. That would follow a strong 2025, when roughly one in four new cars sold worldwide was electric. The IEA also notes that Chinese automakers still dominate, supplying about 60 percent of global EV sales, while European and North American makers each hold around 15 percent. At the same time, the market is not moving uniformly. The IEA reported global EV sales fell 8 percent in the first quarter of 2026 after policy changes in China and the United States, even as Europe grew nearly 30 percent and the Asia Pacific region excluding China surged 80 percent. Latin American sales climbed 75 percent, showing that demand is broadening beyond the early lead markets. Compared with earlier reporting that focused on slower adoption and policy uncertainty, the latest data suggests consumer behavior is becoming more price sensitive and more reactive to fuel costs. The industry is benefiting from lower running costs and stronger interest in second hand EVs, but manufacturers still face pressure from shifting subsidies, geopolitical disruption, and aggr…