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"EVs Cut 1.5 Million Barrels a Day in 2025: The Numbers Behind the Shift"
#ev
#fuel
#iea
#byd
#tesla
@techwheel
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2026-05-08 13:08:54
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# EVs Cut 1.5 Million Barrels a Day in 2025: The Numbers Behind the Shift The headlines keep saying EVs are "growing fast." But this year, the IEA put an actual number on it: electric vehicles displaced approximately **1.5 million barrels of oil per day** in 2025. For context, that's roughly the entire daily production of Qatar. Two years ago the figure was around 600,000 barrels. The acceleration is no longer gradual. Here's what's actually driving it, market by market. ## China: Half the New Cars Are Electric Now China crossed a symbolic threshold in 2025: EVs and plug-in hybrids now account for more than **50% of new passenger car sales**. BYD alone sold **1.76 million fully electric vehicles** in Q1 2025 — compared to Tesla's 336,750 globally in the same quarter. This gap is no longer about production capacity. BYD's vertically integrated supply chain (it manufactures its own Blade LFP batteries, semiconductors, and motors) keeps its average ASP around $22,000 for the Han EV, while Tesla's cheapest new-market entry in China sits around $30,000 after recent price cuts. The Seagull — BYD's entry-level city EV — retails at **$9,700 USD equivalent**. Sales exceeded 250,000 units in Q1 alone. ## Europe: 22% Market Share, With Structural Headwinds The EU market hit **22% BEV share** in Q1 2025, up from 15% in Q1 2024. But the picture is uneven. Norway is already at 92% EV penetration for new sales. Germany, despite the ZEV mandate coming into full effect in 2025, sits at 18% — dragged down by high entry-level prices and a still-fragmented public fast-charging network. The EU's CO2 fleet average target of **93.6 g/km** for 2025 (vs. 116 g/km in 2021) is forcing OEMs to either sell EVs at lower margins or pay fines. Stellantis chose to buy CO2 credits from Tesla. BMW and Mercedes are ramping EV mix ratios aggressively. The wildcard is the Chinese import tariff (45.3% for BYD as of mid-2025). Without it, analysts estimated BYD could undercut the VW ID.3 by €8,000–12,000. ## What 1.5 Million Barrels Actually Means 1.5 million barrels/day of oil not burned equals roughly: | Metric | Estimate | |--------|----------| | Annual CO2 avoided | ~580 million tonnes | | Equivalent to removing | ~126 million ICE cars | | Revenue shift from oil majors | ~$48 billion/year at $90/bbl | The IEA notes this is a conservative estimate — it counts only tailpipe fuel displacement, not upstream extraction, refining, or transport emissions avoided. ## What's Still Missing Two structural gaps limit how fast this displacement accelerates: **1. Grid carbon intensity.** In coal-heavy grids (India, Southeast Asia), well-to-wheel emissions of an EV are 30–40% lower than an ICE, not 70–80%. The displacement benefit is real but smaller until grid decarbonization catches up. **2. Battery replacement economics.** The 150,000-mile used-EV market remains illiquid because buyers can't easily verify battery state-of-health. This slows EV penetration in the used car segment, which represents 3x the volume of new car sales globally. Both problems have solutions in progress — IEC 62933 battery passport standards and on-board SoH diagnostics APIs are on OEM roadmaps — but neither is production-ready across all brands yet. ## The Takeaway 1.5 million barrels is a turning point, not a plateau. The trajectory from 600k (2023) to 1.5M (2025) suggests crossing 3M barrels/day before 2028 is plausible if Chinese export volumes reach more markets and grid expansion stays on pace in Europe and the US. For the automotive industry, the more important number is the **China 50% threshold**. Every major market that crosses 50% triggers a tipping point in dealer network economics, parts supplier consolidation, and used car valuations. Europe has a structural 2-3 year lag. The US is further behind still. The fuel displacement numbers will follow.
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