Only Volvo and VW seen ready for Europe’s EV transformation

Volvo Cars and Volkswagen Group are the only automotive groups in Europe ready for the electric mobility revolution, according to a new study.

The electric vehicle (EV) readiness index, published by Transport & Environment (T&E), puts the two automakers ahead of the pack by a sizeable margin. Most other carmakers are ranked around the middle on a scale of 0 to 100. Toyota came in last among major auto manufacturers.

The index takes into account sales of battery-electric vehicles, European production forecasts provided by researchers IHS Markit, automakers’ public pronouncements about their planned model mix, strategies for battery manufacturing and charging infrastructure and other factors. T&E is a sustainability lobbying group.

The latest ranking showed “big differences in ambition and quality of their plans” between the various car companies, T&E said. It said VW and Volvo have “aggressive and credible strategies,” while most other car companies lacked concrete plans to address the challenges posed by the electric-vehicle revolution.

“Carmakers are desperate to show off their green credentials, but the reality is most of them are miles away from where they need to be,” Julia Poliscanova, T&E’s senior director for vehicles and e-mobility, said in a press release. “Even those that are ambitious lack a suitable strategy to get there.”

Most European car companies have laid out plans to build only electric vehicles sometime in the 2030s. Such moves are essential to meet tightened European Union emissions laws.

T&E’s assessment differs from the generally upbeat pronouncements made in recent weeks by major automakers. Renault, for example, this week announced what it called “a historic acceleration” of its EV strategy.