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Turbocharged Transition & Tenacious Traction: Europe’s Zero-Emission Truck Triumph

सोमवार, 9 जून 2025

Synopsis: -The European zero-emission heavy-duty vehicle market saw strong growth in Q1 2025, led by Ford, Mercedes & Renault Trucks. Sales surged in light & medium segments, especially in the Netherlands, despite an overall 20% market dip.

Macro-Meltdown Masked by Micro-Mobility Momentum

The European heavy-duty vehicle market experienced a steep descent in Q1 2025, with overall sales plummeting 20% from 95,000 to 75,000 vehicles. This decline, though disconcerting, belied the burgeoning boom in the zero-emission vehicle sub-sector, which saw sales soar from 2,800 units in Q1 2024 to 4,100 in Q1 2025, a gallant 45% increase. The contraction, which affected nearly all nations save Bulgaria, Greece, Lithuania & Portugal, was particularly severe for heavy trucks, whose numbers dipped by 23%. Yet, amidst this deceleration, the green vehicle narrative gained irrefutable inertia.

 

Luminescent Leap in Light & Medium Logistics Lanes

Light & medium trucks, typically weighing between 3.5 to 12 metric tons, stood out as the vanguard of the electric evolution. In Q1 2025, they comprised 12% of total HDV sales, translating into 9,300 units. Of these, a remarkable 1,700 were zero-emission, an 83% year-on-year surge from 930 units in Q1 2024. Their share of sales doubled to 18%, a new pinnacle. Ford led this fleet-footed foray, contributing nearly a third of these electric sales, driven by the E-Transit’s market magnetism. Mercedes’ eSprinter also accelerated, registering 290 units, up exponentially from 19 units a year prior.

 

Dutch Dynamism & Decarbonisation Doctrine

The Netherlands emerged as the poster child of zero-emission logistics, where 83% of all light & medium trucks sold in Q1 2025 were electric, a dramatic uptick from previous years. This leap is attributed to the introduction of stringent zero-emission zones across 15 municipalities, wherein only non-combustion vehicles may traverse urban confines. This regulation, in force since January 2025, catalysed the sale of 510 electric light & medium trucks in the Netherlands, nearly threefold the total number sold in all of 2024. Denmark (54%) & Sweden (45%) followed as commendable contributors.

 

Heavy Haulage Halts Yet Hydrogen Hopes Hover

Heavy trucks, vehicles exceeding 12 metric tons, accounted for the lion’s share (77%) of all HDV sales in Q1 2025. However, electrification here remained embryonic. Only 850 of the 58,000 heavy trucks sold were zero-emission, a mere 1.5% share, up slightly from 1% in Q1 2024. Volvo & Renault dominated this niche, capturing 57% of ZEV heavy truck sales. MAN ascended to third, claiming a 15% share owing to its eTGX model. Mercedes, despite commanding 18% of the total HDV market, lagged in the ZEV sphere, registering under 100 sales of its eActros truck.

 

German Gravitas & Gallic Gains Galvanise Growth

Germany maintained its pole position in zero-emission heavy truck sales, logging 300 units or 35% of the total market. France witnessed a modest yet meaningful rise in share from 0.7% to 2.2%. Cumulatively, Germany, France, the Netherlands & Sweden were responsible for 85% of all zero-emission heavy trucks sold in Q1 2025. Sweden also led in proportional share, with 8.7% of its heavy trucks being zero-emission, followed by the Netherlands at 6% & Denmark at 4.5%, suggesting a nascent north-western nucleus of green freight corridors.

 

Bus Bonanza Beckons Battery-Powered Breakthroughs

Buses & coaches, vehicles over 3.5 metric tons designed for passenger transport, comprised 11% of HDV sales in Q1 2025. Of the 8,300 units sold, 1,600 were zero-emission, accounting for 19% of the segment, up from 12% in Q1 2024. Mercedes dominated by selling 310 units of its eCitaro & eSprinter models, amounting to a 19% share, while MAN followed closely with 18% via its Lions City line. Sweden (67%), Romania (55%) & the Netherlands (54%) reported the highest zero-emission bus shares, and countries like Latvia, Hungary & Denmark recorded 100% zero-emission city bus sales.

 

Regulatory Ramparts Reinforce Renewables Race

From July 2025, a binding 15% carbon dioxide (CO₂) reduction target will be imposed on most new heavy trucks sold in the EU-27, anticipated to intensify the uptake of electric trucks. Notably, these standards exclude light & medium trucks, buses & coaches until 2030, granting manufacturers a grace period for transition. Yet, the regulatory harbinger has already stirred proactive electrification efforts in companies like MAN & Ford. The upcoming quarters are expected to reflect a surge in compliance-driven purchases, especially in the heavy truck category where uptake has so far remained modest.

 

Manufacturers’ Misfortune Amidst Market Metamorphosis

Major manufacturers struggled amid the broader downturn. Daimler Truck witnessed a dramatic 34% fall in total HDV sales in Q1 2025 compared to Q1 2024. Scania (-28%) & MAN (-27%) also suffered declines. Renault Trucks, the smallest among Europe’s top seven HDV makers, was the only one to report a sales increase, up 2%. Despite setbacks, Mercedes remained the market leader with an 18% share, followed by Volvo & MAN at 14%, Iveco at 13%, Scania at 12%, DAF at 10% & Renault at 9%. Meanwhile, non-major manufacturers saw their combined share fall to 13%, down from 15% in Q4 2024.

 

Key Takeaways

  • Sales of zero-emission HDVs rose by 45% in Q1 2025 despite a 20% market drop.

  • Ford & Mercedes led zero-emission light truck sales, while Volvo & Renault dominated heavy truck ZEVs.

  • The Netherlands sold 83% of its light & medium trucks as electric, setting an EU benchmark.

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