A clash between policy ambition and market reality has led to the weakening of the UK’s Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) mandate, prompting questions about whether the original aggressive timeline was ever truly viable without more government support for consumers.
Carmakers successfully argued that the mandate put the cart before the horse: it forced them to supply a high number of EVs before mass-market consumer demand had fully materialised. As a BMW spokesperson put it, “mandates do not create demand.”
The industry pointed to the need for price cuts to meet 2024 targets as evidence of this mismatch. Their lobbying essentially convinced the government that you cannot force a transition purely from the supply side; demand must be nurtured as well.
This has led to a policy that now includes more “consumer incentives,” as noted by Nissan. Critics might argue the industry simply shirked its responsibility, but the episode suggests that for ambitious green policies to succeed, they must be part of a holistic strategy that addresses consumer affordability and infrastructure alongside manufacturer obligations.
