Episode

EV Sales Drop 16.5% in February 2026: Tesla and Chery Race to Win Back Buyers With Cheaper Models

Podcast
Electric Vehicles Industry News
Published
Apr 22, 2026
Duration seconds
158
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https://player.megaphone.fm/NPTNI1148052218
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Summary

In the past 48 hours, the electric vehicle industry shows mixed signals with global sales declining amid policy shifts, while new product leaks and manufacturing plans signal innovation. Global new EV sales, including BEVs and PHEVs, dropped 16.5 percent year-on-year in February 2026 to 1,014,980 units, with BEVs down 13.6 percent at 686,737 units; January-February totals fell 8.1 percent to 1,463,457 units[2]. China led the downturn due to ended subsidies, purchase tax rising to 5 percent, and suspended scrappage programs[2]. In the US, California saw EV sales drop 14 percent as federal incentives vanished, with Tesla sales plummeting 24 percent in Q1 2026[3][8][9]. This contrasts with earlier 2025 momentum, when global EV market share hit 25 percent and sales topped 20 million units, up from 17 million in 2024[4]. Tesla's Model Y bucked the trend, selling 68,556 units in February for a 34.8 percent rise and 10 percent BEV share[2]. Emerging competitors are advancing: Chery announced plans Tuesday to build a small EV in Europe, targeting France with a Paris R&D center and eyeing 200,000 annual units[7]. Tesla leaked details of a new smaller, cheaper EV, distinct from the canceled Model 2, featuring compact batteries, shorter range, and no luxury features like premium audio, leveraging in-house 4680 cells[1]. Leaders respond aggressively. Tesla pushes affordable models amid sales slumps[1][8]. Supply chains realign as fuel prices rise, spurring EV adoption in some regions[5]. Consumer behavior shifts toward plug-in hybrids, up 33 percent in Europe[4]. No major deals or regulatory changes emerged in the last 48 hours, but price cuts on used models like Kia EV9 reflect softening demand[6]. Overall, short-term headwinds contrast 2025 growth, with leaders betting on ch…