Skip to main content

Covid to cause ‘lasting reduction’ in ridership: BloombergNEF

Pandemic will also significantly impact EV sales, report predicts
By Adam Hill June 1, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
'The pandemic highlights the value people place on private car ownership during times of crisis,' says BloombergNEF (© Anyaberkut | Dreamstime.com)

The coronavirus lockdown - and worries about infection from any form of shared transportation - will create a “lasting reduction in ridership of municipal bus and metro services”. 

A rise in private car use is one of the key predictions of Bloomberg New Energy Finance’s Electric Vehicle Outlook 2020.

The logical consequences of greater volumes of traffic on the roads are an attendant decrease in air quality and more gridlock - with total kilometres travelled by road returning to 2019 levels "by 2023".

"The pandemic highlights the value people place on private car ownership during times of crisis," the report suggests. “This will lead to more traffic congestion in cities."

BloombergNEF’s fifth annual survey of the electric vehicle (EV) market says: “The next 20 years will bring significant changes as electrification, shared mobility, vehicle connectivity and, eventually, autonomous vehicles reshape automotive and freight markets around the world.”

Shared mobility operators "have also suffered, but will rebound quickly", the report continues. It suggests this recovery will be "on the back of food delivery, logistics and micromobility services".

EV sales in 2020 will fall “for the first time in the modern era” by 18% to 1.7 million, although China and Europe continue to lead, accounting for 72% of passenger EV sales by 2030, it predicts.

Global passenger vehicle sales as a whole are expected to plummet “an unprecedented 23%” this year, with no recovery to 2019 levels before 2025.

EVs’ current share of the passenger vehicle market is 3% but BloombergNEF expects this to rise to 7% in 2023, with sales around 5.4 million.

By 2025, the figure will be 10% of global passenger vehicle sales, rising to 28% in 2030 and 58% in 2040.

Autonomous vehicles will “begin to play a much larger role in the late 2030s”.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Investments in autonomous driving are accelerating, says report
    January 7, 2015
    Google and various automakers have increased their activity and investments toward the goal of self-driving vehicles, while Google has shifted from its previous strategy to now focus on fully driverless vehicles for the future. If successful, it will have significant implications for the auto industry, according to IHS Automotive, based on findings in its new report, Autonomous Driving: Question is When, Not If, which is an update to a previous report issued early in 2014. OEMs remain geared toward aug
  • Advanced telematics and integration to revolutionise global connected car market
    May 22, 2015
    Advanced infotainment systems, over-the-air (OTA) updates, big data analytics, mobility services and in-car security are key technologies that will shape the global connected car market in 2015. Human machine interface (HMI) input and output solutions, as well as, heads up display (HUD) are set to take centre stage. However, car makers must create consumer-centric HMI solutions that will strike a balance between reducing driver distraction and meeting consumer need for connected services. New analysis f
  • Electric bus sector is game changer for battery market
    March 4, 2016
    According to Dr Victoria Adesanya-Aworinde, technology analyst at IDTechEx, the electric bus (e-bus) market is growing at a CAGR of 20 per cent in terms of unit sales. She says the rapid growth is a game changer for the battery market as electric buses require large-sized batteries ranging from 74 kWh (fast charging e-bus) to over 300 kWh (slow charging e-bus). IDTechEx Research forecasts that the e-bus battery market will overtake the consumer electronics sector by 2020. The new IDTechEx Research repor
  • Emovis: Rethinking smart enforcement in the tolling industry
    June 3, 2024
    Know your paying customers well and your violators even better! This almost sounds like a line you’d hear in an old Western classic movie. Actually, it is a credo to live by for tolling agencies, as Miguel Ainsa, operation director at Emovis, explains