Plug-in electric vehicles in Singapore
The adoption of electric vehicles in Singapore is supported by the Singapore government via the Singapore Green Plan 2030 to have new car models required to run on cleaner energy sources and installation of up to 60,000 electric vehicle charging stations. Financial incentives are given to the public for installation of charging points and purchase of electric cars. As of May 2023[update], there were 7,961 electric vehicles registered in Singapore, equivalent to 1.2% of all vehicles in the country. Charging infrastructureIn September 2021, a tender was awarded to install more than 600 charging points in public carparks.[1] Charge+ and a consortium led by ComfortDelGro won the tender.[1] In July 2021, there were around 2,000 public charging stations in Singapore, with one-third of the stations in private premises which are mostly in commercial developments like shopping malls.[2] In March 2022, during a Committee of Supply debate on the Singapore Green Plan 2030, Transport Minister S Iswaran announced that by 2025, every HDB car parks will have a minimum of three charging points each.[3] Tender to install the charging points is to be launched within the first half of 2022.[3] The tender was awarded to 5 operators, Charge+, ComfortDelGro Engineering, SP Mobility, Shell Eastern Petroleum and Strides Automotive Services, to install and operate at least three charging points in each HDB carpark, making a total of at least 12,000 EV charging points.[1] The number of charging stations increased to 2,500 in July 2022.[4] In April 2023, The Straits Times reported that slightly more than 30 EV chargers had been installed in 12 Housing and Development Board (HDB) carparks under the new tender. ChargEco, a joint venture of electricity supplier YTL PowerSeraya and Strides Automotive Services, and Charge+ were the only two out of the five operators who had installed the chargers.[5] By December 2023, the number of charging stations increased to almost 6,000 charging points.[6] As of January 2024, more than 2,400 EV chargers had been installed at about 700 HDB residential carpark.[6] In March 2024, EV-electric (EVe), a subsidiary of the Land Transport Authority to manage charging points deployment, signed an agreement with Huawei to install Ultra-fast chargers in Singapore.[7] Domestic manufacturingDyson initially planned to build an electric car manufacturing plant in Singapore but eventually cancelled the plans in October 2019.[8] In 2020, Hyundai set up an Hyundai Motor Group Innovation Centre (HMGICS) in Jurong Innovation District within Jurong.[9] The centre also contains an electric vehicle manufacturing plant, the first in Singapore.[9] The center was completed at a cost of $400 million in January 2023.[10] It was originally expected to be completed by November 2022 but was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic in Singapore.[10] SalesAs of September 2021[update], the Tesla Model 3 was the best-selling electric car in Singapore.[11] In September 2022, EV registrations were about 19% of all new car registrations.[1] By the end of 2022, there were 6,531 electric vehicles registered in Singapore, equivalent to 1% of all vehicles in the country.[12] As of May 2023[update], there were 7,961 electric vehicles registered in Singapore, equivalent to 1.2% of all vehicles in the country.[13] BYD overtook Tesla to become the top-selling EV brand in Singapore.[13][14] TransitIn March 2022, there were 60 electric public buses in use with plans to convert half of Singapore’s public bus fleet (5,800 buses in March 2022) to be electric buses by 2030.[3] Taxis operators of Singapore also planned to have half of Singapore’s taxi fleet (around 15,000 taxis in March 2022) to change to electric taxis by 2030.[3] Land Transport Authority had extended the statutory lifespan of electric taxis from 8 to 10 years to let operators recover their investment in electric taxis.[3] GovernmentOn 10 February 2021, the government released the Singapore Green Plan 2030 which includes the installation of up 60,000 electric vehicle charging points.[15] In July 2021, the government offers rebates via the Electric Vehicle Common Charger Grant for charging station installations equivalent to 50% of the cost of installation, capped at S$4,000 for 2,000 charging stations.[2] The grant expires on 1 January 2024 or when grants for 2,000 chargers had been awarded.[2] As of October 2022[update], the Singaporean government offers tax rebates of up to S$45,000 for electric vehicle purchases.[16] As of November 2022[update], the government offers a 45% rebate on car registration fees for electric cars.[17] References
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