Toyota, Volkswagen auto sales to push planet beyond 1.5C heating limit: study

Greenpeace

Automakers worldwide are on track to sell an estimated 400 million more diesel and petrol vehicles than is feasible to keep global heating under 1.5°C, according to a new report published by Greenpeace Germany.[1][2] The overshoot is equivalent to approximately five times the total number of cars and vans sold globally in 2021.

Auto sales by Toyota, Volkswagen, and Hyundai/Kia are on track to exceed the 1.5°C compatible trajectory by 63 million, 43 million, and 39 million combustion engine vehicles, respectively, jeopardizing global climate action, the report finds.

"Leading auto manufacturers, including Toyota, Volkswagen, and Hyundai, are transitioning far too slowly to zero-emission vehicles, which has dangerous consequences for our planet. As the climate crisis intensifies, governments from New York to Singapore are enacting stricter bans on diesel and petrol vehicles. If traditional automakers fail to electrify, they will lose out to newer, all-electric competitors and risk stranded assets. Toyota, Volkswagen and other leading automakers are on a collision course with the climate," said Benjamin Stephan, climate campaigner at Greenpeace Germany.

Expected combustion engine vehicle sales overshoot relative to a 1.5°C carbon budget (as calculated in the Greenpeace Germany report )

ToyotaVolkswagen GroupHyundai/KiaGM
Overshoot in % [lower bound; upper bound]* 164% [144%; 184%] 118% [100%; 136%] 142% [124%; 159%] 57% [25%; 90% ]
Overshoot in million vehicles [lower bound; upper bound] 63 million [55 million; 71 million] 43 million [37 million; 50 million] 39 million [35 million; 44 million] 13 million [6 million; 21 million ]
*Three transition scenarios were used in the report. The bolded figure refers to the base case, while the lower and upper limit results are listed in brackets.

Traditional automakers that are slow to transition to electric vehicles face potential stranded assets and risk a significant loss of market share as climate regulations take hold. The report finds that over US$2 trillion is at risk in market capitalization and debt across the world's 12 largest car manufacturers alone.

"As representatives from around the world convene at COP27 this week, Toyota and other automakers continue to ignore the severity of the climate crisis. Car companies need to stop selling diesel and petrol vehicles, including hybrids, by 2030 at the latest. At the same time, they must reduce supply chain emissions and ensure that workers' rights are protected amid the transition," said Stephan.

Toyota is the largest automaker in the world by sales, yet a recent study from Greenpeace East Asia found that electric vehicles comprised only one out of 500 cars that the company sold in 2021. Toyota received the lowest score in Greenpeace East Asia's 2022 auto ranking due to its slow transition to zero-emission vehicles.

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