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    Home » Inside Norway’s EV Success Story — And What the UK Can Learn From the Policy Decisions That Made It Work
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    Inside Norway’s EV Success Story — And What the UK Can Learn From the Policy Decisions That Made It Work

    Megan BurrowsBy Megan BurrowsApril 19, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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    Inside Norway’s EV Success Story — And What the UK Can Learn
    Inside Norway’s EV Success Story — And What the UK Can Learn

    Something subtly strange appears when you drive through the Lofoten Islands, a group of striking, mountainous islands in Norway’s Arctic Circle where the roads follow the coastline between fishing villages and the summer light never quite goes out. Fast chargers are placed next to parking spots in the red wooden warehouses and supermarkets of small towns with hundreds of residents. Not as innovations, as infrastructure. As commonplace as the gas station signs that once characterized the British motorway landscape, they are becoming progressively less significant. The chargers are largely idle at a Tesla Supercharger bank in Reine, one of the most popular tourist destinations on the island during the busiest travel season. Not because no one is operating a vehicle. because there is no need to wait in line due to the network’s high density.

    In 2025, 96% of new cars sold in Norway were electric. The UK was handling less than a quarter in the same year. Since wealth, geography, or the unique qualities of Norwegian consumers are not the main causes of the disparity, these figures are frequently discussed but rarely adequately contextualized. For years, Christina Bu, secretary general of the Norwegian EV Association, has stated unequivocally: “I don’t think a green mindset has much to do with it. It has to do with strict regulations and people’s growing awareness that driving an electric vehicle is feasible.” The achievement was built. It was developed gradually, purposefully, and consistently over the course of more than thirty years of policy, and it has withstood numerous administrations and political cycles without being undone.

    TopicInside Norway’s EV Success Story — And What the UK Can Learn
    Norway EV Market Share96% of new cars sold were electric in 2025 (from ~96.9% fully electric in June 2025). In 2024, 90% of new passenger car sales were fully electric. EVs became the most common passenger vehicle type on Norwegian roads by 2025. EVs will be most common overall by 2032. UK comparison: fewer than 25% of new registrations are fully electric (2025)
    Core Incentives (Norway)1990: Purchase and import tax abolished for zero-emission vehicles. 2001: 25% VAT exemption introduced (to remain until 2027). Additional: exemption from registration tax; motor fuel taxes; 50%+ reduction in road taxes, ferry fees, parking. Access to bus lanes (since withdrawn in Oslo). Per 2025 OECD data: EV advantage valued at USD $3.5B in 2021 alone
    Charging Infrastructure GapNorway: ~27,000 public charging stations; 447 chargers per 100,000 people; fast charger on every main road; max 30 miles between rapid charge points. UK: ~73,000+ public chargers (but lower density): 89 chargers per 100,000 people. A 2022 Norwegian study: establishing the first public charging station led to a 200% average increase in local EV ownership over five years
    The Critical Mass Moment2008–2011: Only 10,000 EVs sold in Norway in four years. 2022: The same 10,000 sold in about four weeks. The inflection point came when the total cost of EV ownership reached parity with ICE — a tipping point driven by consistent fiscal policy rather than any single product launch
    ReferenceIEEP UK — What Could the UK Learn From Norway, the World Leader in Electric Vehicle Rollout? (ieep.uk)

    It is more important to look at the details of that policy’s architecture than its broad strokes. Not in 2010 or 2015, but in 1990—before most people had heard of a Tesla, before Elon Musk was well-known, and before the first iPhone—Norway eliminated import and purchase taxes on zero-emission cars. A complete 25% VAT exemption was added in 2001. In addition to receiving at least a 50% reduction in road taxes, ferry fees, and parking charges, EV owners were exempt from motor fuel and registration taxes. They had access to bus lanes for a while, which shortened commutes in places like Oslo. Over the course of more than 35 years, these incentives had the cumulative effect of making the economic case for EVs so overwhelmingly strong that buying one became a logical financial choice rather than an ideological one. By 2021, the OECD estimated that the total economic benefit of owning an electric vehicle (EV) over combustion equivalents was $3.5 billion in a single year. The Norwegian treasury paid for this benefit, but it created a market shift that could not have been achieved through consumer awareness campaigns or manufacturer subsidies.

    Perhaps more instructive for the UK is the infrastructure story, which is just as tangible. Norway sold just 10,000 EVs in four years between 2008 and 2011. The same quantity was sold in about four weeks in 2022. Because a particularly appealing model entered the market, the inflection did not occur. It occurred because the total cost of owning an EV was equal to that of owning a combustion vehicle, and the network of charging stations had grown so dense that range anxiety was no longer justified. There are currently about 27,000 public charging stations in Norway, with at least one fast charger on each major road and a maximum distance of 30 miles between rapid chargers. There are 447 chargers for every 100,000 people. There are currently 89 chargers per 100,000 people in the UK, a country with a much larger population and a much more advanced urban road network. According to a 2022 Norwegian study, the installation of a single public charging station in a community increased local EV ownership by 200 percent over five years. Demand is not met by the infrastructure. It produces it.

    Additionally, Norway tackled the issue of apartment dwellers, which the UK has mostly left to market forces. Most people who live in cities don’t have private driveways. At home, they are unable to charge. This was considered a minor detail in the EV transition narrative for many years. It was considered a prerequisite in Norway. The government passed “charging right” laws between 2017 and 2021, giving apartment building occupants a legal right to have charging infrastructure installed, along with funding for housing associations. Regardless of how much they might have wanted to take part, the densest urban populations would not have been able to participate in the transition without it.

    The UK’s experience during that time period can be used as a case study to illustrate the consequences of treating policy as provisional. Labour reinstated the 2030 deadline for ceasing sales of new internal combustion engine vehicles in 2030 after delaying it until 2035. In 2022, when the market in Norway was already selling EVs at a rate of 10,000 per month, a discount on purchase taxes for EVs that had been implemented to boost the market was eliminated. In the UK, advertising that refers to hybrid cars as “self-charging” is still permitted. The Norwegian EV Association calls this a lie. Now enacted into law, the ZEV mandate requires manufacturers to meet increasing EV sales percentages, but it is still vulnerable to industry lobbying pressure, which has already resulted in concessions. Sam Rawson, enterprise director of the EV charging platform Monta, stated, “We are still fighting off fear, uncertainty, and doubt,” which is a courteous way of stating that the policy environment is not as settled as the Norwegian one was at any comparable stage.

    Comparing these two paths gives the impression that the UK is attempting to get to Norway while viewing the route as optional. The consistency with which the government communicates its commitment to reaching that goal is more important than the destination itself, whether it be 2030, 2035, or some percentage target under the ZEV mandate. Norway’s lesson is not that there is a Nordic cultural inclination toward electric motors, that wealth makes the transition easier, or that cold countries are paradoxically good at selling EVs. The lesson is that individual interventions are not as effective at changing consumer behavior as consistent policies that are sustained long enough to establish market certainty. The market, the grid, the technology, and the goals are all in the UK. The willingness to quit second-guessing itself is what it lacks and has lacked for the majority of this decade.

    Inside Norway’s EV Success Story — And What the UK Can Learn
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    Megan Burrows
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    Political writer and commentator Megan Burrows is renowned for her keen insight, well-founded analysis, and talent for identifying the emotional undertones of British politics. Megan brings a unique combination of accuracy and compassion to her work, having worked in public affairs and policy research for ten years, with a background in strategic communications.

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