EU at the bedside of an automotive industry in “danger of death”

- Jackson Avery

The European automotive industry is “in danger of death,” said Stéphane Séjénéné, the vice-president of the European Commission.

Minimum electric vehicle quotas in business fleets, support for innovation, obligation of European components in cars sold in Europe … The French official has detailed in an AFP interview the tracks of the Brussels executive to relaunch a sector in crisis.

The battle of the electric vehicle “is not lost”, he believes.

“The European Commission comes out of its naivety, protects and organizes the sector, gives it the opportunity to gain competitiveness,” said Stéphane Séjourné, while sites of sites are increasing in a sector that employs 13 million people in Europe.

Weakened by a market at half mast, manufacturers like Volkswagen or Stellantis face the arrival of massively subsidized Chinese competitors, at the very moment when they consent enormous investments in the electrification of vehicles to respect the ban on petrol and diesel engines in the EU from 2035. And the threat of American surcharge brand by Donald Trump

“Boost the request”

Electric cars, still too expensive, saw their market share fall in the EU for the first time in 2024, at 13.6% over the year. In order to “boost the request”, the Commission is studying “obligations” imposed on companies to green their fleets, explains the European Commissioner.

Electric vehicle quotas would be imposed on them in a text presented by the end of the year.

These purchases would also be facilitated by “tax incentives” harmonized at the EU scale which will be proposed to the Member States. Business vehicles are a powerful lever because they represent almost 60% of new registrations in Europe.

Promote the “made in Europe”

“I want European consumers to be able to buy European vehicles,” says Stéphane Séjourné. The plan, presented in Brussels at midday by the transport commissioner, tzitzikostas apostolos, provides for “European content requirements for battery cells and certain components of electric vehicles sold in the EU”, in order to help the subcontractors.

“We are working on the list” of the components concerned, explains Stéphane Séjourné who evokes “a shock of tenders” in addition to the efforts to restart the demand. “All countries do it today, be it the United States, China, India, there is only Europe that has not put in place these devices,” he said.

The Commission will also explore direct subsidies to the manufacture of batteries in the EU and want to soften the framework of state aid which today limits this type of support.

The objective of selling only new CO2 emission vehicles from 2035 “is maintained but with flexibilities” in order to avoid leading certain late manufacturers by inflicting the heavy fines provided for by the regulations, explains the vice-president of the European executive. “It’s common sense. It was not going to penalize the manufacturers we wanted to help. ”

The relaxation will consist in taking into account the emissions over three years, from 2025 to 2027, instead of a single year, which amounts to granting an additional time to increase sales of electric vehicles.

Multiply the charging stations –

Electric vehicle recharge infrastructure remains insufficient in Europe and very unevenly distributed, a brake on the purchase long denounced by the automotive sector. The Commission wants to “accelerate the deployment of charging stations” and will mobilize 570 million euros for this purpose between 2025 and 2026.

The Commission will set up and support an alliance for connected and autonomous vehicles to fill the delay in key software and technologies today dominated by China and the United States. European industry will thus be able to pool resources in these areas in which economies of scale are crucial, without being hampered by competition rules.

Stéphane Séjé also wants to “harmonize the rules of use and tests of the autonomous car in Europe” in order to facilitate their deployment on the roads.

Jackson Avery

Jackson Avery

I’m a journalist focused on politics and everyday social issues, with a passion for clear, human-centered reporting. I began my career in local newsrooms across the Midwest, where I learned the value of listening before writing. I believe good journalism doesn’t just inform — it connects.