Skip advert
Advertisement
Opinion

'Budget 2024 missed the big chance to incentivise EVs and stop the blizzard of cheap Chinese car imports’

Quentin Willson of FairCharge thinks the failure to support the UK electric car industry in the 2024 budget could have far-reaching effects as cheap Chinese imports roll in

Opinion - Quentin Wilson

Even if you hate electric cars on a cellular level, you might have been surprised that there was nothing at all in the Budget to support them. For private buyers there are now no EV subsidies – the Government even ditched the home charge box grant. 

Last week, my campaign group FairCharge wrote an open letter to the Chancellor asking for a VAT cut on public charging from 20 per cent to 5 per cent, in line with domestic rates to help the 38 per cent of drivers in the UK who can’t charge at home. This modest ask was supported by energy providers, carmakers, media, politicians, and environmental groups. We worked out that the cost to HMT would be circa £40million at current rates of adoption. A relatively small amount compared to the £1billion the duty freeze and continuance of the 5p cut provided during Covid. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

This Government needs to send a signal to global investors that the UK has a long-term industrial electrification policy, and this was a golden opportunity to do just that. Because here’s the thing – if we don’t get more private buyers buying new and used EVs our auto industry will be swept away by budget Chinese EV imports. 

It won’t be long before we see a £12,000 Toyota Corolla-sized EV saloon and an £8,000 EV city car. That will mean a price war which our car industry won’t win. I’ve heard presentations from Chinese car makers who have learnt how to do RHD engineering at scale and are now sizing up UK showrooms, lining up franchise dealers and crafting parts distribution networks. 

This Government can’t - or won’t - see the blizzard of cheap EVs that are coming. They may be good for consumers, but not so good for the 800,000 jobs in the automotive supply chain and the massive £202billion contribution to the economy. Europe, the USA and China are forging ahead, but thanks to cack-handed Government policies and missed messaging we’ve fallen behind in the critical race for global investment. Sad, but true.

Subscribe to the UK's favourite car magazine: get Auto Express delivered every week...

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New Toyota Yaris: next-gen supermini to embrace hybrid and EV power
Toyota Yaris - front (watermarked)

New Toyota Yaris: next-gen supermini to embrace hybrid and EV power

The new Toyota Yaris will arrive by 2028, and our exclusive images preview how it could look
News
5 May 2026
New Freelander 8: huge SUV is coming to the UK, just don’t call it a Land Rover
Freelander 8 - front

New Freelander 8: huge SUV is coming to the UK, just don’t call it a Land Rover

We get the scoop about a UK sales confirmation of the new joint-venture between Chery and Jaguar Land Rover
News
28 Apr 2026
New Skoda Epiq interior sketches lay a path to the big reveal
Skoda Epic interior

New Skoda Epiq interior sketches lay a path to the big reveal

Skoda releases images of the Epiq interior as the build up begins to the full reveal on May 19th 2026.
News
4 May 2026