- Europe, like you've never read before -
Thursday, 16 October 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • it ITA
  • en ENG
Eunews
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • News
  • Digital
  • Green
  • Agriculture
  • Other sections
    • European Agenda
    • Culture
    • Sports
  • Newsletter
  • European 2024
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • News
  • Digital
  • Green
  • Agriculture
  • Other sections
    • European Agenda
    • Culture
    • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Eunews
No Result
View All Result

Home » Business » Italy sets record in EU for passenger cars: in Val d’Aosta there are 2.3 per inhabitant. Still behind on electric

Italy sets record in EU for passenger cars: in Val d’Aosta there are 2.3 per inhabitant. Still behind on electric

In 2022 there was an average of 0.56 cars per inhabitant in the EU, the same as in the previous year. Six out of the 10 regions with the highest motorization rates are in Italy. Among the 27 member states, Netherlands and Sweden furthest ahead in the conversion to electric

Simone De La Feld</a> <a class="social twitter" href="https://twitter.com/@SimoneDeLaFeld1" target="_blank">@SimoneDeLaFeld1</a> by Simone De La Feld @SimoneDeLaFeld1
6 May 2024
in Business
auto

Auto elettrica in carica [foto: Wikimedia Commons]

Brussels – Italy is a Republic founded on…passenger cars. The Statistical Office of the European Union counted 45,667 million of them in 2022, with as many as six Italian regions in the top 10 in Europe for motorization rate. But conversion to electric cars remains a chimera: in the EU, Italy does better only than Spain, Greece, the Czech Republic, and Poland.

There were an average of 0.56 cars per inhabitant in the EU in 2022, Eurostat data showed. But considerable regional differences emerge, with over two cars per inhabitant in Valle d’Aosta to 0.08 in Mayotte, a French archipelago in the Indian Ocean. The podium is all Italian: the record motorization rate in Val d’Aosta, with 2,339 cars per thousand inhabitants, was followed by the Autonomous Province of Trento with 1,431 and Bolzano with 935. Six of the 10 regions with the highest motorization rate were in Italy. The other four were in Finland, Greece, the Netherlands, and the Czech Republic.

Val d’Aosta’s record rate reflected favorable tax regulations and territory-specific conditions. At the other end of the range, the French overseas region Mayotte (83 passenger cars per 1,000 inhabitants) was followed by Greek Peloponnisos (203 per 1,000 inhabitants) and French Guyane (217 per 1,000 inhabitants). Four of the 10 regions with the lowest motorization rates were in Greece In addition to the two French overseas territories and two regions in Romania, the results obtained by the metropolitan areas of the capitals of Germany and Austria are relevant: in Berlin, there were only 331 cars per 1,000 inhabitants, and in Vienna 366.

The high number of passenger cars in Italy is actually reflects the past, considering that in the last two decades, Italy saw among the lowest average growth rates in the EU.

During 2002-2022, almost all member states experienced an increase in the motorization rate: in first place, Romania, with a rate of +5.7 percent per year, followed by Estonia (+3.9 percent) and Poland (+3.6 percent). At the opposite end of the scale, the Netherlands (+0.8 percent), France, Italy, Malta, and Austria (+0.7 percent), Belgium (+0.5 percent), Germany (+0.4 percent), Luxembourg, and Sweden (+0.2 percent) were the only member states to record average annual growth rates below 1 percent.

Netherlands and Sweden lead conversion to electric

The regions of the Netherlands and Sweden stood out among the EU regions with the highest share of electric cars. In the Flevoland region, over one in ten cars is already electric (12.8 percent), while in Utrecht and Stockholm, 6.6 percent. In the European top ten, four regions are in the Netherlands, four in Sweden, one in Luxembourg, and one in Austria. At the end of the line, with shares of electric cars close to zero, are seven regions in Greece and one each in the Czech Republic, Poland, and Spain.

The share of electric cars is also negligible in most Italian regions due to several factors, including government incentives (tax cuts or subsidies), availability, access to charging stations, and the supply of electric cars and their cost. Excluding the autonomous province of Trento (2.66 percent), only Tuscany (0.58 percent) is just over 0.5 percent. There are 158,000 electric cars in Italy, up from 12,000 in 2018. But still far from the 330,000 already circulating in the Netherlands, the nearly 600,000 in France, and the over one million in Germany.

English version by the Translation Service of Withub
Tags: carelectric cars

Eunews Newsletter

Related Posts

italia agricoltura photovoltaics
Politics

European Parliament approves regulation for zero net emission in industry

26 April 2024
Green Economy

ECA tough on clean car policies: “An uphill road”

22 April 2024
Business

Green Deal pushes China’s electric car but not the EU’s

12 January 2024
emissioni
Business

EU agreement on new Euro 7 standards, tightening on pollutants but same limits as Euro 6 on emissions

19 December 2023
map visualization
Habeck

Germany elections: Robert Habeck to be Green Party’s chancellor candidate

by Francesco Bortoletto bortoletto_f
18 November 2024

The economy minister has a firm grip on the environmental party, which will now support him between now and the...

von der leyen lula g20 mercosur

Von der Leyen at G20 pushes to close EU-Mercosur deal. Now Italy, too, looks to the no front led by France

by Simone De La Feld @SimoneDeLaFeld1
18 November 2024

The Free Trade Agreement with the four Latin American countries has been at a standstill for nearly a quarter century....

germania

Immigration: Johansson warns Germany: ‘Ready for infringement procedure, if necessary’

by Emanuele Bonini emanuelebonini
18 November 2024

Home Affairs Commissioner reminds of the prerogatives and limits of member states. "Each state still remains bound by EU rules"

Antonio Tajani

Tajani appeals to the EPP and Socialists on EU vice-presidencies: ‘Serious mistake to waste time on political whims’

by Simone De La Feld @SimoneDeLaFeld1
18 November 2024

The Ribera case in Spain is making headlines, with the Partido Popular warning that it will not support the formation...

  • About us
  • Contacts
  • Director’s Point of View
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie policy

Eunews is a registered newspaper - Press Register of the Court of Turin n° 27

Copyright © 2023 - WITHUB S.p.a., Via Rubens 19 - 20148 Milan
VAT number: 10067080969 - ROC registration number n.30628
Fully paid-up share capital 50.000,00€

No Result
View All Result
  • it ITA
  • en ENG
  • Politics
  • World politics
  • Business
  • General News
  • Digital
  • Green Economy
  • Agriculture
  • European Agenda
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Opinions
  • Newsletter

No Result
View All Result
  • it ITA
  • en ENG
  • Politics
  • World politics
  • Business
  • General News
  • Digital
  • Green Economy
  • Agriculture
  • European Agenda
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Opinions
  • Newsletter

This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.

Attention