Tesla Proves To Be Too Pricey For Germany, Loses Tax Subsidies (reuters.com) 121
Tesla has been removed from Germany's list of electric cars eligible for subsidies because its Model S sedan is too expensive for the scheme. Tesla customers cannot order the Model S base version without extra features that pushed the car above the 60,000 euro ($71,500) price limit, a spokesman for the German Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Controls (BAFA) said on Friday. From the report: Germany last year launched the incentive scheme worth about 1 billion euros, partly financed by the German car industry, to boost electric car usage. A price cap was included to exempt premium models. "This is a completely false accusation. Anyone in Germany can order a Tesla Model S base version without the comfort package, and we have delivered such cars to customers," Tesla said in a statement. The carmaker said the upper price limit was initially set by the German government to exclude Tesla, but later a compromise was reached "that allows Tesla to sell a low option vehicle that qualifies for the incentive and customers can subsequently upgrade if they wish." It said, however, it would investigate whether any car buyers were denied the no-frills version. Under the subsidy scheme, buyers get 4,000 euros off their all-electric vehicle purchase and 3,000 euros off plug-in hybrids.
Re: Cuz Tesla was not a Jerhmahn! (Score:1)
Chevy Bolt.
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In Europe it's called the Opel Ampera-e. Same car.
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In Europe it's called the Opel Ampera-e. Same car.
Yet, this is a country that sells Mercedes Maybachs for how much?
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In Europe it's called the Opel Ampera-e. Same car.
Yet, this is a country that sells Mercedes Maybachs for how much?
So you are jealous that Americans can only make overpriced E-cars, not luxury cars? An E-Maybach also wouldn't qualify for the E-vehicle subsidy - and, yes, Mercedes-Benz have presented a study of an E-Maybach.
Re: Cuz Tesla was not a Jerhmahn! (Score:2)
Nissan makes more than Tesla. So do several Chines (Score:5, Insightful)
Several companies make more electric cars than Tesla does. Nissan is one you've heard of, probably. The Nissan Leaf is the most popular. They also make some all-electric vehicles for business use.
Several companies in China make electric cars. In fact China makes more electric cars than the rest of the world combined. BYD is one Chinese company.
> I have only ever heard of Telsa manufacturing them.
Nissan and BYD executives don't announce they're building a tunnel, without permits, for a scientifically questionable vacuum subway from their parking lot to some other city. They just make good cars. Elon Musk is the PT Barnum of our age.
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No Ray, Elon Musk is trying something that hasn't been done whereas you're just a jealous faggot with a coal-fired intellect firing off PT Barnum aphorisms. FTFY.
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Several companies make more electric cars than Tesla does. Nissan is one you've heard of, probably. The Nissan Leaf is the most popular. They also make some all-electric vehicles for business use.
I was looking for a new car this year, and I very much wanted an electric car. So I checked all of the ones available in this country, including the Leaf, the Ionic, a bunch of hybrids and a couple others I forgot. Also a Tesla.
The Leaf or Ionic are the ones I remember clearly, so I'll write about them and ignore the forgettable ones. They are cute cars. The Ionic especially surprised me in a positive way. Very nice car. But they are not in the same class as the Tesla. Their range is laughable and the way t
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Price also matters. In my country you get between 2.5 - 3 Ioniq:s (not Ionic) for the price of one Tesla.
Re:Nissan makes more than Tesla. So do several Chi (Score:4, Interesting)
for example, on the Leaf you have to rent the battery - it isn't included in the car price and you can not buy it for any money
As a (used) Leaf owner, I can confirm that I own the whole damn car - including the battery. It has traveled over 30,000 miles while dropping 1 bar out of 12 for range. The range is still over 80 miles per charge.
It has snow tires on it for Winter driving. The Leaf warms itself up on a timer before I leave for work. I never have to stop at a gas station, and get about 40 miles per day for $1 (roughly $38 in electricity per month).
By the time that I need to purchase a new battery ($5000 at the moment) I will have saved significantly more money in gasoline alone. Outside of tires and windshield washer, maintenance is not an issue.
This is not an advertisement. My other (gasoline) cars are a Mitsubishi, Toyota, and Porsche. The bottom line is that the Leaf is the cheapest car to operate and maintain.
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As a (used) Leaf owner, I can confirm that I own the whole damn car - including the battery
Interesting. So that is a country thing (I'm currently living in Austria). The Nissan dealer made it sound like that is general policy. I asked about this point specifically, because it surprised me.
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Bolt EV. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Ferret
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Volkswagen, Mercedes, BMW... there's a reason Tesla lost its subsidies and even other car manufacturers have a hard time in the EU. Germany runs the EU and they are very protectionist.
Re: Cuz Tesla was not a Jerhmahn! (Score:2, Informative)
Percentages do not tell the whole tale of lobbying to set the price cap that excludes their competitor.
Re:Cuz Tesla was not a Jerhmahn! (Score:5, Informative)
Just out of curiosity, who else makes viable electric vehicles?
Audi, BMW, BYD Chevy, Citroen, Fiat, Ford, GM, Honda, Hyundai, Kia, Mercedes-Benz, Mitsubishi, Peugeot, Renault, Smart, and Volkswagen. And I was being kind only listing the companies producing cars that I have actually seen driving around in the streets, and skipping over the producers I haven't seen in the wild. In the USA Nissan probably makes that list but I've yet to see a Leaf, strange given that it's the 3rd best selling electric car in Germany.
The vast majority of them are budget cars too. Several of my colleagues own Renault Zoes, VW e-Golfs, Opel (GM) Amperas, and we often joke about the one who owns the Fiat 500e. Fiat 500s have a long reputation of breaking down, but there's so little to go wrong in an electric drive train but we always say I'm sure the 500e will be the car to make that happen :-)
Where does Tesla sit in Germany? Year to date in 14th place. The Audi A3 has sold 5 times as many as the Tesla S this year, followed very closely by a Renault Zoe (which I nearly bought myself, but there was a 6 month waiting list on getting charging infrastructure installed in my street and I needed a car right now so I bought a Clio). BMW and VW's electric vehicles are far more popular in Germany than Tesla, and curiously so is the Kia Soul.
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The vast majority of them are budget cars too.
Now we see the problem.
Yeah, the problem is that the Tesla is too fucking expensive to be subsidized for mass-rollout of EVs. Even compared to cars from BMW and Mercedes.
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If you try to be a Grammatiknationalsozialist on the Internet then at least spell the words right.
Love from Germany!
Oh, please, it also affects Porsche, BMW, Mercedes (Score:1)
Porsche Panamera Hybrid
Mercedes S Class Hybrid
BMW 7 (eDrive)
Just off top of my head. All of these would be eligible if they were cheaper.
If you got 60k+ for a car, you don't need 4k tax reduction.
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"This is a completely false accusation. Anyone in Germany can order a Tesla Model S base version without the comfort package, and we have delivered such cars to customers," Tesla said in a statement.
From the summary. Try reading next time.
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Because the Germans are using a Volkswagen calculator.
Re: "customers cannot order the Model S base versi (Score:5, Informative)
The result of german newspaper investigation was:
Tesla does not produce the base version - although it was offered.
Some buyers got the premium version for the price of the base version.
In a testbuy scenario, Tesla sell staff told its not possible to buy base version, base version does not exist - IT is just to Trick german law. So the customer had to buy the premium version.
Sounds like trouble for tesla.
German newspaper:
http://www.autobild.de/artikel/kaufpraemie-fuer-elektroautos-infos-und-antragsformular-8535657.html
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Tesla cars area joke. They typically won't break even for their high price vs. fuel savings. Buying a car with a small engine is more cost effective.
They're nothing but a rich person's "fashion statement".
If the U.S. took away Tesla's subsidy, they'd go bankrupt very quickly.
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Tesla's subsidy runs out next year.
They pre-sell all their cars. They won't go bankrupt at all. LOL
If demand goes down 15%, they're still selling exactly the same number of cars. And making the exact same amount of money per car.
It is a premium car with nameplate value, but they haven't tried to explore the upper end of the tolerable price. Instead they're building up their manufacturing so they can output more, and keeping surplus demand. Everybody already knows they have surplus demand. It is a brilliant
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Yeah, losing hundreds of millions all based on hype, no good can come of that, just look at companies like Amazon. Was a big hype during the dot com bubble, but now hardly anyone even remembers it.
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So does Tesla, once they start selling half a million cars a year. Which is probably around 2019.
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Unlikely, even if they don't go bankrupt before that. They still haven't figured out how to make more than a few hundred Model 3s a month. Moreover, they are unable to sell the extremely expensive Model S and Model X at a profit, so even if they manage to get their act together and produce large numbers of the much cheaper (but not much cheaper to make) Model 3s, that will only accelerate the cash outflow.
Even if Musk is able to convince shareholders to keep on pumping in billons, they finally learn how to
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If they haven't run out of money before 2019, the EV market will be very crowded by then and most of Tesla's competitors absolutely do know how to engineer a production line.
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Tesla is not Amazon. For every Amazon, there are ten start ups that went bankrupt. Do you remember the dot com crash? There were a lot of companies "like Amazon" that went bust.
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Non sequitur. That helps the cash flow but does nothing for profitability. You should ask DeVry for a refund on that MBA.
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It isn't a non-sequitur at all, I simply didn't explain all the details. I incorrectly presumed you understand and be able to fill in the implicit details.
Non-sequitur means you didn't understand. When facing things you don't understand, the correct response would be to ask questions to increase your knowledge, instead of just deciding that everything you don't yet understand is absurd.
Also, profitability is not the antonym for bankruptcy. If you have positive cash flow you're probably not bankrupt yet, and
Re:Need to cut price by 50% (Score:4, Informative)
People who buy a Model S are not looking to save money. The car is about a 100K if you take a reasonable package. When you can dump 100K on a car, you're not counting how many cents you save per kilometer.
Re:Need to cut price by 50% (Score:4, Funny)
You have never met a German, have you?
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You have never met a German, have you?
I actually am a German. Not sure on whom the joke is with that.
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Buying a car with a small engine is more cost effective.
This explains perfectly why there's no such thing as Ferrari, Louis Vuitton, Bollinger, Louboutin etc...
Obeying the letter but not the spirit of the law (Score:1)
"The carmaker said the upper price limit was initially set by the German government to exclude Tesla, but later a compromise was reached "that allows Tesla to sell a low option vehicle that qualifies for the incentive and customers can subsequently upgrade if they wish." It said"
Seems pretty silly if a substantial part of the reason for the price cap was to prevent Tesla cars specifically being included, but then they did an end-run around that by letting you buy the base model + the upgrade. I bet you can
Re: Obeying the letter but not the spirit of the l (Score:4, Insightful)
It's doubtful that the law would be valid if it outright said "except Tesla" in its language. So they tried to infer it by putting a price cap just under what a Tesla S costs. Then Tesla started offering a trim package that meets the law's price criteria.
What exactly is the problem again? Oh, what it said in the summary: this program is partially paid for by the German auto makers, and the German auto industry doesn't want to have that money going to Tesla. So let's fuck around with sock puppets in the government rather than build a competitive offering. Because clearly someone that was going to buy a Tesla is going to change their mind over this subsidy and get an electric VW Golf instead?
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There will be edge cases whatever they set the price to.
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If a specific goal of the policy was to prevent a certain make of car from being included, then there are two things they can do:
1. Explicitly exclude that make (or make + model) from the policy
2. Set the price cap at a level that means even the base version of that car does not qualify
The regulators chose to do neither, instead they negotiated with Tesla to allow their cars to slip through a loophole.
GM (Score:1)
Ouch (Score:1)
Ferret
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Wrong. [bfy.tw]
There is no reason to subsidize a $70,000+ car (Score:5, Insightful)
Note I am in no way against the wealthy. I wish them every success.
But they don't need government assistance to buy a luxury vehicle.
Re: There is no reason to subsidize a $70,000+ ca (Score:1)
Please go to a huge city without vehicle emissions controls and tell me that EVs would not be cleaner. And when I say huge city, I mean Beijing, Guangzhou, Bangkok, Mumbai, Singapore - somewhere with 10+ million people trying to go about their lives with air thick enough to cut with a knife.
Petrol vehicles increase their pollution contribution with every mile driven. EVs at least have the hope of having a much reduced amount of pollution when charged with renewable energy, and even in the case of being ch
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Look around you. How many luxury SUV's don't you see in the inner city? Mercedes, Lincoln, ... they cost about $65k and up. People don't seem to have any problem plunking down $50k+ for a car.
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Look around you. How many luxury SUV's don't you see in the inner city? Mercedes, Lincoln, ... they cost about $65k and up. People don't seem to have any problem plunking down $50k+ for a car.
I'm not sure if you are agreeing with me or not.
According to Kelly Blue Book the average new car price in 2017 is $34,600 https://mediaroom.kbb.com/2017... [kbb.com]
The only cars over $65K shown in the price breakdown are high-end luxury or performance.
By definition a luxury is not a necessity. The government subsidizing a luxury is nuts.
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I agree that the luxury cars aren't a necessity, however, plenty of "poor" people that get various housing and food subsidies already pay for brand new 4x4 pickup trucks and luxury SUV's that retail at $50k+.
I live in the inner city myself, the average income here is ~$35k but my entire neighborhood is dotted with recent year Jaguars, Escalades, Navigators, Crew Cabs. Not sure how they afford it, all I got is a $15k pre-owned VW and a used Jeep. Removing those subsidies would be hurting those poor people.
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I agree that the luxury cars aren't a necessity, however, plenty of "poor" people that get various housing and food subsidies already pay for brand new 4x4 pickup trucks and luxury SUV's that retail at $50k+.
I live in the inner city myself, the average income here is ~$35k but my entire neighborhood is dotted with recent year Jaguars, Escalades, Navigators, Crew Cabs. Not sure how they afford it, all I got is a $15k pre-owned VW and a used Jeep. Removing those subsidies would be hurting those poor people.
So you are living responsibly and within your means, but you are in favor of subsidizing people who don't? I don't agree with your thinking. If they can afford a $50k+ car with a subsidy, they can afford a $37K+ car without one. And that's exactly what they should be doing, looking for a car they can afford.
BTW I can afford a new luxury car but I'm driving a 1999 with over 281,000 miles. When it fails I will look for another good value used car.
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But they don't need government assistance to buy a luxury vehicle.
The logic is that by subsidising a new industry, eventually the technology will become cheap enough for everyone else to benefit too. As much as it makes for great headlines, sometime subsidising the wealthy is actually a net gain for everyone (but only in some specific cases).
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But they don't need government assistance to buy a luxury vehicle.
The logic is that by subsidising a new industry, eventually the technology will become cheap enough for everyone else to benefit too. As much as it makes for great headlines, sometime subsidising the wealthy is actually a net gain for everyone (but only in some specific cases).
This isn't one of those cases. There are plenty of non-luxury EV and hybrid cars that cost much less.
https://cars.usnews.com/cars-t... [usnews.com]
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This isn't one of those cases.
What is the criteria? If you you get too specific with what qualifies and what doesn't you defeat the purpose of innovation (ie let creators create).
Battery tech is a worthy investment. Tesla still receives much, much less subsidies than the fossil fuel industry, and kills much less people in the process.
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This isn't one of those cases.
What is the criteria? If you you get too specific with what qualifies and what doesn't you defeat the purpose of innovation (ie let creators create). Battery tech is a worthy investment. Tesla still receives much, much less subsidies than the fossil fuel industry, and kills much less people in the process.
When using tax incentives to encourage consumer behavior the government must balance the cost of the incentives against the impact on consumer behavior and the selling price. Vendors aren't stupid, they know they can charge more when the government is subsidizing the purchase.
The luxury market is less driven by cost than by cachet. That's why automaker love high end vehicles, the margins are much higher. If the government wants to subsidize EV/Hybrid tech they can do it in the mid-range consumer market
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When using tax incentives to encourage consumer behavior ...
The tax incentives are to help kick start an new industry which will hopefully return a greater benefit to society than it costs. Based on the growth of solar, battery tech, and EVs, and the effect of reducing dependencies on fossil fuels, foreign energy dependence and millions of deaths a year from air pollution, I'd say they are working.
Most of the vehicles in your list are foreign. The local competition only exist because of Tesla and subsidies.
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When using tax incentives to encourage consumer behavior ...
The tax incentives are to help kick start an new industry which will hopefully return a greater benefit to society than it costs. Based on the growth of solar, battery tech, and EVs, and the effect of reducing dependencies on fossil fuels, foreign energy dependence and millions of deaths a year from air pollution, I'd say they are working. Most of the vehicles in your list are foreign. The local competition only exist because of Tesla and subsidies.
Well the industry is booming along at this point. I say it is time to end the subsidies. But of you don't believe me, perhaps you will believe Elon Musk:
https://seekingalpha.com/artic... [seekingalpha.com]
He knows his customers will still happily buy his product without the subsidies.
Just change the add ons to "aftermarket" add ons (Score:2)
Just remove the extras and make them aftermarket add ons. Tesla could probably put a kit together.
Of course there should be an upper limit (Score:1)
Why not just give tax breaks up to 40.000$? you can now get a usable EV for those money.
I wanted a Bolt(Opel Ampera-e) but they won't sell them here.
I live in Denmark, A place where we don't give a crap about EVs or green energy any more. In fact, we are probably the only country were the number of EVs on the street went down this year.
The government decided to drop tax breaks for EVs because people were buying Teslas like crazy. With a 180% tax om cars, they didn't stand a chance here.
So they have started
Price limit was not specifically against Tesla (Score:2, Informative)
To those who claim that the 60000 Euro price limit for the cars was created specifically against Tesla - nope, it was against luxury cars in general, since everybody who can afford a 60000+ Euro car does not really need a 4000 Euro tax break. Also, the subsidies were not only for pure EV, they were also for hybrid models. So the price limit also excludes models from Porsche (Panamera hybrid), Mercedes (S class hybrid), BMW (7 series eDrive) and other big manufacturers.
Tesla cheated, pure and simple. The rul
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And why, you might ask, did the German govt agree to that weird concession / loophole? Because this entire scheme was illegal under EU trade law, and germany likely would've lost if Tesla sued them over it. It was pure protectionism of local manufacturers, plain and simple. You can claim all you want that it also hits some of the super-high end models of Porsche, ect, but the fact that the cutoff was jjuuuust below the lowest-end Tesla was no coincidence.
If some Tesla salespeople did imply you were force
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GM Volt/Bolt, Nissan Leaf, Mitsubishi MiEV or whatever it's called - all more affordable electric vehicles. In general I support not subsidising conspicuous consumption.
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i8 is a hybrid.
I would love to own one though....