The future is bleak for car ownership

The future is bleak for car ownership

My list

Author | Patricia LicerasToday, it is easy to get around large cities in private vehicles without having to own them thanks to traditional renting and other modern formulas such as vehicles with drivers or shared cars. There are a growing number of options and these new forms of transport are changing, not just our perception of mobility, but the automotive sector as a whole, as indicated in various studies.A recent report drawn up by Europcar Mobility Group Spain revealed that seven in ten drivers believe these forms of transport will end up replacing car ownership in the short to medium term. Most, 58.6%, believe it will disappear within ten years or even less, while 11.7% believe it will take longer, occurring probably within the next 20 years or more. Either way, 71.4% consider shared vehicles to be the most feasible alternative for replacing car ownership.

By 2030, one in three kilometres driven will be ‘shared’

The figures in this study coincide with the conclusions of another European study conducted by PwC (PriceWaterhouseCoopers), entitled "Five trends transforming the Automotive Industry". According to the study, less than 1% of all car journeys in Europe are currently made using shared transport services. A percentage that by 2030, in Europe could reach 35% of the kilometres driven, 34% in the United States and 46% in China.According to the document, “Once the technical difficulties and uncertainties have been resolved in terms of regulations, the kilometres driven in shared transport will increase substantially”.

Lower stock of vehicles and more registrations

In this regard, and during a process closely related to the impact of shared cars and technological development, the stock of vehicles is expected to drop in Europe by 25% -from 280 to 200 million units- by 2030. In the United States, the drop would be similar, nearing 22% and going from 270 to 212 million cars.Paradoxically, this lower stock is expected to coincide with a climb in registrations which, by 2030, will increase in Europe by 34% (from 18 to 24 million units) and by 20% in the United States (to 21.6 million vehicles).The reason is relatively simple. The use of shared cars is much more intensive; therefore the average useful life of shared cars is reduced considerably, meaning they will need to be replaced within a shorter period of time. According to PwC, a car used for car sharing is used for more hours of the day and will cover an average of 58,000 kilometres, more or less the same as a taxi, compared with the average of 13,230 kilometres driven by a conventional vehicle.

Great innovative efforts

In a scenario in which car ownership is no longer a priority compared with new forms of transport, “all stakeholders within the sector must be prepared for a profound period of transformation” according to PwC. And it warns that the transition towards that new automobile scenario is going to be particularly delicate for traditional manufacturers and suppliers, who will have to “invest greatly in innovation” if they want to get ahead in a market with increasingly narrow margins and more competitors than ever.Specifically, “they won’t be able to focus their business models solely on production and sales processes; they will also have to focus on different types of uses and the vehicle’s entire lifecycle”. And only manufacturers that are able to adapt to this transport revolution will be able to guarantee their medium-term future.Images | Keith Wickramasekara/UnsplashNick Fewings/UnsplashThought Catalog/Unsplash

Related Content

Recommended profiles for you

DH
Dirk Heuser
[ui!] Urban Software Institute
Director Marketing & Communications
LN
Luis Núñez
Sinergia
Director
SR
Santiago Rugeles
ubitricity GmbH
Business development manager with focus in opening new markets for the company in the south of EU.
ER
Edésio Rocha
Estúdio Mineiro de Arquitetura
Director
GB
Gabriel Barrera Delgadillo
Cal y Mayor y Asociados S.C.
Coordinador Comercial de TI
DG
Dan gildoni
placense
CEO and CO founder placense
CB
coraima barraza carrillo
netflix
pues que soy muy bien trabajador
SG
Santiago Guerrero
Independent
Urban Mobility Advisor
TG
Tiphayne Ganier
Université Nice Côte d'Azur
I am an engineering student and participate to the program MSc Engineers for Smart Cities in IMREDD
DG
David Gorgues
Asproseat
CMO
YG
Yvan Guevara
Cgr
Supervisor
KM
Kenji Matsuno
Japanese Mission to the EU
Policy analysis of mobility, infrastructure, construction in the EU
AB
Arnau Blanch
Endesa X
B2G Marketing & Sales
FE
Federico Estevez Lacarra
3M
Rail KAM
YT
Yanlin Tong
Navinfo Europe
marketing manager
PG
Precilia Godart
CPC
Global Partnerships Officer
BU
Burcu UĞUR
PİTON R&D
Business Developer
FR
Fabio Román Arbelo
SODETEGC
Technical Coordinator
JM
Juliana Maridani
autonomous
autonomous architect
IB
Ivan Balmanya
Ajuntament de Barcelona
Engineer on Mobility Department. Design, execution, monitoring projects. Communication skills