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EV sales continue to rise, but the last two years of headlines falsely stating otherwise would leave you thinking they haven’t. After so many lies, it would be nice for everyone to stop pushing this false narrative that they could find the truth behind by simply looking up one single number for once.

(This is an update of a previous article which remains largely true today, but apparently bears restating, since this misinformation remains pervasive)

Here’s what’s actually happening: Over the course of the last two years or so, sales of battery electric vehicles, while continuing to grow, have posted lower year-over-year percentage growth rates than they had in years prior. EV sales used to grow at 50%+ per year, but for the last couple years, they have grown closer to ~25% per year.

This alone is not particularly remarkable – it is inevitable that any growing product or category will show slower percentage growth rates as sales rise, particularly one that has been growing at such a fast rate for so long.

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In some recent years, we had even seen year-over-year doublings in EV market share (though one of those was 2020->2021, which was anomalous). To expect improvement at that level perpetually would be close to impossible – after 3 years of doubling market share from 2023’s 18% number, EVs would account for more than 100% of the global automotive market, which cannot happen.

Clearly, growth percentages will need to trend downward as a new product category grows. It would be impossible for them not to.

To take an extreme example, it would be odd to say that sales are slumping in Norway, which just set a record at 98.3% BEV market share in September with 14,329 units moved, because BEV sales only went up 14.6% compared to the previous September’s 96.4% BEV number (incidentally, 2024 YoY sales were up 10%, so sales growth actually is accelerating, but market share growth cannot at such high percentages).

And yet, this mathematical necessity has been reported time and time again in media, and by anti-EV political forces, as if EV sales are down, despite that they continue to rise.

The actual short-term status of EV sales – they’re still up

Instead of the perpetual 50% CAGR that had been optimistically expected, we have seen a global EV sales growth rate of 23% in the first 10 months of this year, according to a report just released by Rho Motion (recently acquired by Benchmark Mineral Intelligence). That includes a +32% bump in Europe, +22% bump in China, +4% in North America, and a big +48% bump in the “rest of the world.” Notably, this 23% global growth rate is higher than last year’s YTD growth rate, which was 22% at this time.

It’s clear that EV sales growth rates have been held back by falling Tesla sales, the company which had previously been the global leader in EV sales. Outside of this last quarter which saw a pull-forward in demand due to credit expiry, Tesla sales have been dropping for about two years in most territories it sells in.

This is primarily due to chaotic leadership at the wayward EV leader – as buyers have been driven away from Tesla’s brand by CEO Elon Musk, while most other companies have seen significant increases in EV sales.

(Musk himself even spread disinformation about EV sales on Tesla’s 2024 Q3 earnings call, when he said “a lot of the industry are seeing year over year declines in order volumes,” even as EV sales were growing – showing his disconnection with the trends of his own industry as he falls deeper into social media addiction).

Even “slower growth” isn’t really correct anymore

In covering these trends, some journalists have attempted to use the less-wrong phrase “slower growth,” showing that EV sales are still growing, but at a lower percentage change than previously seen.

But for the first nine months of this year, that isn’t true – EV sales are up more in 2025 than in 2024 by a percentage basis.

They are also up in raw sales numbers – in 2024, EV sales grew by a larger number than in 2023. And the same is true so far in 2025.

Going back to 2023, 10.7 million EVs were sold globally. Then in 2024, 13.3 million were sold, a difference of 2.6 million. And so far in 2025, 16.5 million EVs have sold, a difference of 3.2 million. Not only are the numbers getting bigger, but the growth in unit sales is getting bigger as well.

So while EV sales growth is lower than the earliest days when the market was brand new, and lower than the post-covid boom, it is so far higher this year than last year, and we are likely to close out the year with a larger increase in unit sales than was seen from ’23-’24, even taking into account US tax credit expiry.

But the US is one country worth focusing on, as the US is dragging behind the rest of the world right now.

The exception that proves the rule

US EV sales have also been held back by misguided tariffs, which have only become more chaotic. Due to this and other policies aimed to stop the boom in domestic manufacturing led by the Biden administration, companies aren’t offering Americans the advanced, low-cost EVs that in many cases the rest of the world has access to (and, especially, anything that isn’t an SUV).

Overall, though, the EV market has increased so far this year, with 11.7% US EV sales growth YTD. That said, that is changing.

In one specific month so far, October, the US saw a YoY -38% drop in EV sales, which is a major contributor to the 10% month-over-month drop in the table above. This is because EVs were inflated in cost by $7,500 (by republicans, with the support of Elon Musk), while gas cars continue to benefit from $20k+ in ignored costs over their lifetimes. Obviously, this is going to distort the market, and will continue to going forward for the time being.

But we’ve seen this happen before, we’ve seen everyone grouse about it, and we’ve seen EV sales continue to rise regardless.

In late 2023, Germany abruptly ended its EV incentives, leading to a period of depressed sales. In their case, the end wasn’t even telegraphed, it just happened quickly, so EVs didn’t get to benefit from a chunk of buyers who pulled forward their purchases in order to get the incentives before they disappeared.

This resulted in around a year of depressed sales for EVs, and since Germany is Europe’s biggest auto market, it depressed European sales too – making it seem that the continent had lost enthusiasm for electric vehicles, even though sales continued to grow basically everywhere in Europe but Germany.

But now, EV sales are up again in Germany. The country brought back a partial incentive recently, but EV sales had already started going back up before then. The end of incentives slowed progress, but not for long.

We expect to see a similar thing happen in the US. EV buyers aren’t suddenly going to go back to inferior gas vehicles now that they already know EVs are better, and new buyers will continue to find out they’re better over time. The pace will slow in one country for some period of time, but will likely pick back up after an adjustment period.

Meanwhile, the rest of the world will continue to electrify rapidly, and the single country and single political party that has decided to jeopardize its nation’s competitiveness will cause the temporary pain for Americans that is their overall goal, while having no significant effect on the rest of the world’s growth (and, in some ways, encouraging that growth).

Finally, some have suggested that this is a natural part of any technology adoption curve, as a technology transitions from being used by “early adopters” to “early majority.” Most consider the “chasm” between these groups to be somewhere around the 10-20% adoption range. It is possible that certain countries, like the US, are seeing this chasm and may eventually come around to the reality that EVs are just better.

EIA graph showing relative market shares in US. Note: this is market share, and data has not been updated since the start of this year (hm, wonder why).

In terms of US hybrid sales, much has been made of customers “shifting from EVs to hybrids,” which is also not the case. Conventional gas-hybrid sales are indeed up and plug-in hybrids, which have grown more slowly than gas-hybrids/BEVs, have also shown some growth lately.

But gas-hybrid sales have not come at the cost of EV sales, rather at the cost of gas-only car sales. Because as the above graph shows, both are increasing rapidly, and gas car sales are the ones going down.

Gas car sales are actually going down

Because that’s just the thing: the number of gas-only vehicles being sold worldwide is a number that actually is falling. That number continues to go down year over year.

Sales of new gas-powered cars are down by about a quarter from their peak in 2017, and show no signs of recovering. It is exceedingly likely that 2017 will be the high-water mark of gas-powered cars ever sold on this planet.

Source: BloombergNEF Electric Vehicle Outlook 2025

And yet, somehow, virtually every headline you read is about the “EV sales slump,” rather than the “gas-car sales slump.” The one you keep hearing about isn’t happening, but the one you rarely hear about is happening.

These numbers are easily verifiable in moments. No matter what region of the world you’re in, EV sales were up in the first 9 months of this year. This has been true for most recent quarters when taking into account year-over-year numbers (the traditional way to measure car sales, since car sales are seasonal), though these false headlines have persisted.

Why does it matter? These lies influence policy – and cause more pollution

All of this matters because the constant incorrect reporting is causing changes in plans for both automakers and governments who are pulling back on EV plans, and contributes to incorrect consumer perceptions which in turn actually can affect demand, all of which dooms humanity to worse health and climate outcomes.

Early on as this pattern of lies started to show itself in the media, David Reichmuth of the Union of Concerned Scientists suggested that one motivation behind the false headlines could be to influence regulations. The idea goes that, by pretending EV sales were “cooling,” despite that they were not, automakers could convince governments to pull back on their future commitments, thus allowing automakers to continue business as usual instead of having to put in effort to make actually good cars that don’t poison everything around them.

But those regulations already passed and timelines were loosened after automaker whining, so congratulations, you got what you wanted, you get to poison people a bit more for a few more years. But apparently that’s not enough, because now certain entities are still looking to poison you more.

The same pattern is happening now in Europe, with automakers spending most of this year begging the EU to let them pollute just a little longer.

It even happened for a short time in China, but there the car dealers’ association merely asked for a temporary reprieve to sell off remaining gas-powered inventory, while demanding that automakers stop sending a glut of unsellable gas cars. Slightly different from the Western automakers who keep begging to poison people just a little bit longer.

And yet, the headlines have continued, and so many outlets continue to push the same false narrative that they have for two years now claiming that EV sales are down. Some number of consumers who hear these constant falsehoods may have their EV buying decisions delayed as a result, which could in turn actually be suppressing EVs below the even higher level that they would be at without so much incorrect reporting.

It has also influenced brands to change their plans. Porsche, for example, just said it will take a $6B loss and delay future EV models, claiming low demand. However, Porsche’s electric car sales are up 27% globally YTD, while its combustion-only sales are down, showing that even manufacturers are not immune to this misinformation, even in reference to their own sales numbers.

And Toyota, who were never serious about EVs anyway and are one of the worst climate companies in the world, also lied about EV demand last week when it delayed a battery plant. Outlets took Toyota’s lie at face value, and uncritically repeated this false information (including Nikkei Asia, who refused to fix the falsehood despite yours truly sending in a correction).

These are not the only two companies who have canceled plans citing the same falsehood. Maybe it’s strategic, maybe they’re looking for an excuse, but they’re going against the global trend, which is usually not the best for business.

More importantly, it’s also not good for the planet and everything on it. Higher EV sales growth rates would be preferable to the current status quo and are needed to meet climate targets – so this would be objectively better from the perspective of all life on Earth. Or rather, a faster decline in gas car sales is what’s truly needed, and would be beneficial to all living beings on this planet.

The environment cannot wait, and humans can’t spend the next 10-20 years breathing down the poison coming out of the tailpipe of each gas-powered vehicle sold today. This needs to end and it needs to end now. The faster we act, the easier it will be for the world to reach carbon reductions that are objectively necessary to achieve.

But overall, the point of this article is that media headlines suggesting some slowdown in EV sales are simply incorrect, and leave out the bigger picture that gas car sales actually are dropping, and that’s a good thing. And it’s hard to imagine that these headlines, which have gone on for over two years now, are not intentional at this point.

Each journalist who has spent the last two years perpetuating the myth of an EV sales slowdown could have read any one of our articles, or googled a single number showing year-over-year EV sales in any region or for most countries and most brands, and found that they are still going up. The information is out there and easy to find.

And if misinformation is done knowingly and intentionally despite ready access to truth, which is your job as a journalist to seek and find, it’s a lie.

So stop lying.


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Global EV sales jump 21% in 2025 as Europe surges and the US stalls

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Global EV sales jump 21% in 2025 as Europe surges and the US stalls

EV and battery supply chain research specialists Benchmark Mineral Intelligence reports that 2.0 million electric vehicles were sold globally in November 2025, bringing global EV sales to 18.5 million units year-to-date. That’s a 21% increase compared to the same period in 2024.

Europe was the clear growth leader in November, while North America continued to lag following the expiration of US EV tax credits. China, meanwhile, remains the world’s largest EV market by a wide margin.

Europe leads global growth

Europe’s EV market jumped 36% year-over-year in November 2025, with BEV sales up 35% and plug-in hybrid (PHEV) sales rising 39%. That brings Europe’s total EV sales to 3.8 million units for the year so far, up 33% compared to January–November 2024.

France finally returned to year-to-date growth in November, edging up 1% after spending most of 2025 in the red following earlier subsidy cuts. The rebound was led by OEMs such as the Volkswagen Group and Renault, a wider selection of EV models, and France’s “leasing social” program, aimed at helping lower-income households switch to EVs.

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Italy also posted a standout month, logging record EV sales of just under 25,000 units in November. The surge followed the launch of a new incentive program designed to replace older ICE vehicles. The program earmarks €597.3 million (about $700 million) in funding for the replacement of around 39,000 gas cars.

The UK expanded access to its full £3,750 ($4,400) EV subsidy by adding five more eligible models: the Nissan Leaf (built in Sunderland, with deliveries starting in early 2026), the MINI Countryman, Renault 4, Renault 5, and Alpine A290.

US market slows after federal tax credit’s premature death

In North America, EV sales in the US did tick up month-over-month in November, following a sharp October drop after federal tax credits expired on September 30, 2025. Brands including Kia (up 30%), Hyundai (up 20%), Honda (up 11%), and Subaru (232 Solterra sales versus just 13 the month before) all saw gains, but overall volumes remain below levels when the federal tax credit was still available.

Policy changes aren’t helping. In early December, Trump formally “reset” US Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards, lowering the required fleetwide average to about 34.5 mpg by 2031. That’s a steep drop from the roughly 50.4 mpg target under the previous rule. Automakers can now meet the standard largely through gas vehicles, reducing pressure to scale BEVs and PHEVs.

Those loosened rules are already reflected in investment decisions, such as Stellantis’ $13 billion plan to expand US production by 50%, with a heavy focus on ICE vehicles. Earlier this year, Trump’s big bill set fines for missing CAFE targets to $0, further weakening the incentive for OEMs to electrify. 

That’s some foolish policymaking, considering the world reached peak gas car sales in 2017. The US under Trump will be left behind, just as it will be with its attempts to revive the coal industry.

China still dominates, exports surge

China remains the backbone of global EV sales, even as growth slows. The Chinese market grew 3% year-over-year and 4% month-over-month in November. Year-to-date, EV sales in China are up 19%, with 11.6 million units sold.

One of the biggest headlines out of China is exports. BYD reported a record 131,935 EV exports in November, blowing past its previous high of around 90,000 units set in June. BYD sales in Europe have jumped more than fourfold this year to around 200,000 vehicles, doubled in Southeast Asia, and climbed by more than 50% in South America.

Global snapshot

Global EV sales from January to November 2025 vs January to November 2024, YTD %:

  • Global: 18.5 million, +21% 
  • China: 11.6 million, +19%
  • Europe: 3.8 million, +33%
  • North America: 1.7 million, -1%
  • Rest of World: 1.5 million, +48%

The takeaway: EV demand continues to grow worldwide, but policy support – or the lack thereof – is increasingly shaping where this growth shows up.

“Overall, EV demand remains resilient, supported by expanding model ranges and sustained policy incentives worldwide,” said Rho Motion data manager Charles Lester.

Read more: EV sales *still* have not fallen, cooled, slowed or slumped. Media is lying to you.


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Hyundai’s new midsize electric SUV spotted overseas for the first time

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Hyundai's new midsize electric SUV spotted overseas for the first time

The Elexio is Hyundai’s first electric SUV custom-tailored for the Chinese market, but now it’s headed overseas.

Hyundai is bringing the Elexio electric SUV overseas

Hyundai’s midsize electric SUV was spotted on a carrier truck in Melbourne, Australia, alongside a few of its other vehicles.

Although the Elexio is built by Hyundai’s joint venture with BAIC Motor, Beijing-Hyundai, “tailor-made for Chinese consumers,” we had a feeling it would be sold overseas.

A few months ago, Don Romano, CEO of Hyundai Australia, hinted that the midsize electric SUV could arrive in The Land Down Under. Romano told journalists during an IONIQ 9 launch event that the Elexio’s launch in Australia was “under evaluation,” calling it “a promising vehicle.”

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Hyundai confirmed the rumors shortly after, saying the new midsize electric SUV would launch in Australia in early 2026.

According to CarsGuide, the Elexio was caught on a car carrier in Melbourne on Wednesday morning ahead of its official launch.

Hyundai-electric-SUV-overseas
The Hyundai Elexio electric SUV (Source: Beijing Hyundai)

Powered by an 88.1 kWh battery, the Elexio delivers up to nearly 450 miles (722 km) CLTC range. It’s based on the E-GMP platform, which underpins all IONIQ models and Kia’s EV lineup, with single and dual-motor (AWD) powertrain options. The electric SUV can also recharge from 30% to 80% in about 27 minutes.

The interior is packed with advanced Chinese tech, including Huawei’s advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS) and a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8295 chip that powers the massive 27″ 4K widescreen display.

Hyundai-electric-SUV-overseas
Hyundai Elexio electric SUV interior (Source: Beijing Hyundai)

The Elexio is 4,615 mm long, 1,875 mm wide, and 1,698 mm tall, with a wheelbase of 2,750 mm, which is a bit shorter than the Tesla Model Y. It’s closer in size to the BYD Yuan Plus, sold overseas as the Atto 3.

Hyundai’s midsize electric SUV is expected to compete with some of Australia’s top-selling EVs, including the Tesla Model Y and Geely EX5.

Hyundai-Elexio-electric-SUV
The Hyundai Elexio electric SUV (Source: Beijing Hyundai)

Prices have yet to be announced, but given the IONIQ 5 starts at $76,200 (AUD), before on-road costs, the Elexio should be slightly cheaper.

In China, the Elexio is available in three trims: Fun, Smart, or Tech, with pre-sale prices starting at RMB 119,800 ($16,900).

Although the electric SUV is launching in Australia and possibly other overseas markets like New Zealand, it’s not expected to be a true global vehicle. Hyundai designed it specifically for Chinese buyers, leveraging local tech and design elements.

For those in the US, if you’re looking for a midsize electric SUV, the IONIQ 5 is worth a look with 300+ miles of range, fast charging, and a spacious, tech-filled interior. With leases starting at just $189 a month, the IONIQ 5 is cheaper than most gas-powered cars in its class. You can use our link to find the Hyundai IONIQ 5 models closest to you.

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Iron-sodium grid batteries just took a big step toward US rollout

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Iron-sodium grid batteries just took a big step toward US rollout

Iron-sodium battery makers Inlyte Energy just crossed an important line from lab to grid reality. The company has completed a factory acceptance test of its first field-ready iron-sodium battery energy storage system with reps from a major US utility in attendance.

Iron-sodium battery storage

The test took place at Inlyte’s facility near Derby in the UK, and was witnessed by representatives from Southern Company, one of the largest electric utilities in the US. The goal was to prove the performance and integration readiness of the whole system, which combines sodium metal chloride battery cells with inverters and control electronics. By Inlyte’s account, the system performed as expected and is ready for field deployment.

The energy storage market is growing fast, and utilities are looking beyond lithium‑ion. Iron-sodium battery storage systems are emerging as a compelling alternative to lithium-ion batteries for grid-scale use, as they rely on abundant, low-cost materials and offer strong safety and long-duration performance.

While lithium-ion batteries excel at fast response and short-to-medium-duration storage, iron-sodium systems are better suited for multi-hour to multi-day grid applications where cost, thermal stability, and long service life matter more than energy density.

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The global energy storage market is projected to grow from approximately $70 billion in 2025 to over $150 billion by 2030. The US Department of Energy estimates the grid will need more than 225 gigawatts of long‑duration energy storage by 2050.

Inlyte is betting that iron‑sodium batteries can help fill that gap. The system tested in the UK utilizes what the company claims are the world’s largest sodium metal chloride battery cells and modules ever built, each capable of storing more than 300 kilowatt-hours of energy. The chemistry is designed to be lower-cost, safer, and longer-lasting than lithium-ion – key traits for grid-scale storage.

During the factory test, Inlyte’s battery system hit 83% round‑trip efficiency, including auxiliary loads. That puts it in the same range as high-performance lithium-ion systems and well above the roughly 40% to 70% efficiency typical of many other long-duration energy storage technologies. Southern Company’s R&D team observed the test in person, a step that helps clear the way for real‑world deployment.

The commercial plan

Next up: the field. Inlyte says its first energy storage systems will be installed at Southern Company’s Energy Storage Test Site in Wilsonville, Alabama, in early 2026. Those deployments will allow the utility to study how the iron‑sodium batteries perform under real grid conditions.

With technical readiness now demonstrated, Inlyte is turning its focus to US manufacturing. The company plans to finalize a site for its first domestic factory in 2026. To help speed that process, Inlyte has partnered with HORIEN Salt Battery Solutions, the world’s largest producer of sodium metal chloride batteries. HORIEN brings over 25 years of commercial experience across applications like critical power, remote industrial sites, and battery energy storage.

The plan is to combine HORIEN’s manufacturing know‑how with Inlyte’s system integration work to bring sodium‑based grid batteries to the US market. If all goes according to plan, Inlyte expects commercial deliveries of domestically produced systems to begin in 2027.


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