Are Electric Vehicles Near a Tipping Point?

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Oil consumption continues to rise in the U.S. and around the world, but as electric vehicles keep growing as a percentage of vehicle sales, there will ultimately be a tipping point on multiple fronts. The first will be manufacturers investing in more EVs to ultimately overtake internal combustion engines, which is happening today from Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) to General Motors (NYSE: GM) to Porsche.

The bigger tipping point will be a peak in oil consumption that the world will (likely) never look back from. We don't know when peak oil will happen, but given the cost reduction of EVs and the focus on reducing emissions around the world, it's only a matter of time.

Tesla Model S driving on the road.
Tesla Model S driving on the road.

Image source: Tesla.

EV sales are still booming

There's no question that Tesla has led the EV revolution the last decade, and it's helping drive the industry's growth. According to the website Inside EVs, Tesla has already sold 99,525 Model 3, S, and X vehicles in the U.S. through July 2019, and total U.S. EV sales across all manufacturers were 176,174 thru seven months of 2018, a 14.5% increase from 153,854 a year ago.

Global electric vehicle sales were 1,105,405 in the first six months of this year, a 46.9% jump from 752,690 a year ago. It's this growth on a global level that's going to lead to that tipping point.

No matter where you look, EV sales are going up. And in 2020 and 2021, there will be even more options coming to the market from Porsche, Ford, Kia, Mini, and many more.

Meanwhile, overall auto sales are falling

As EV sales are rising, overall vehicle sales are falling. You can see the steady decline in U.S. auto sales below, and according to the Center for Automotive Research, global auto sales are expected to fall by 4 million units in 2019 from about 79 million a year ago.

World Oil Consumption Chart
World Oil Consumption Chart

World oil consumption data by YCharts. Auto sales are on a monthly basis.

EVs are still only a fraction of total global sales with 2 million to 3 million vehicles expected to be sold this year. But sales are growing even as overall sales decline.

Why is oil consumption going up?

If EV sales are going up and auto sales overall are going down, then why is the chart above showing that oil consumption is rising? The two reasons: Larger vehicles, like trucks and SUVs, are a bigger portion of the sales mix, and people are driving more with the vehicles they have.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics, total highway miles driven have been rising steadily since 2011, including during the period of declining auto sales that you see above.

In the U.S., light trucks are now a whopping 69% of the market. That includes small SUVs up to large trucks, but these vehicles are typically less efficient than cars, so as they increase in numbers, they increase oil consumption.

It'll take time to overcome the trend to larger vehicles and the higher oil consumption that comes with it. But remember that it was only a few years ago that oil consumption in the U.S. was declining because the economy was weak and fuel efficiency was going up. Trends can reverse quickly inside the traditional auto industry, and with EVs continuing to take share, a reversal in consumption growth could happen quickly.

Is the tipping point coming?

EVs will continue to take market share in the auto industry, and for the companies investing in new technology, that may not change their volumes much. GM, Volkswagen, and Nissan are some of the early leaders in EV technology and will continue to increase EV volumes. Of course, Tesla will be leading the charge. Every automaker will be impacted by the growth of EVs, and those getting out in front of it will be best off financially.

Where there's more uncertainty on the investment impact is in oil consumption. If SUVs continue to rise as a percentage of overall sales, there could be an increase in oil consumption overall for years, but the share of EVs in the total vehicle population is simultaneously going up. If oil prices rise in response to greater fuel consumption, then it could make EVs look even better by comparison. Given the lower fundamental cost of operating an EV, there may be no going back once that happens.

When the recession hit in 2008, oil prices tumbled from over $140 per barrel to less than $40, and there was only about a 2% decline in overall demand. If EVs create a structural decline in oil demand, it could have a devastating impact on the oil industry -- and it's coming more quickly than it might seem.

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Travis Hoium has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

This article was originally published on Fool.com

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