Plug-in
hybrids pollute almost as much as petrol cars, report finds
Analysis
of 800,000 European cars found real-world pollution from plug-in hybrids nearly
five times greater than lab tests
Ajit
Niranjan Europe environment correspondent
Thu 16
Oct 2025 06.00 CEST
Plug-in
hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) pump out nearly five times more planet-heating
pollution than official figures show, a report has found.
The cars,
which can run on electric batteries as well as combustion engines, have been
promoted by European carmakers as a way to cover long distances in a single
drive – unlike fully electric cars – while still reducing emissions.
Data
shows PHEVs emit just 19% less CO2 than petrol and diesel cars, an analysis by
the non-profit advocacy group Transport and Environment found on Thursday.
Under laboratory tests, they were assumed to be 75% less polluting.
The
researchers analysed data from the onboard fuel consumption meters of 800,000
cars registered in Europe between 2021 and 2023. They found real-world carbon
dioxide emissions from PHEVs in 2023 were 4.9 times greater than those from
standardised laboratory tests, having risen from being 3.5 times greater in
2021.
“Real-world
emissions are going up, while official emissions are going down,” said Sofía
Navas Gohlke, a researcher at Transport and Environment and the co-author of
the report. “This is the gap that is getting worse and it is a real problem. As
a result, PHEVs pollute almost as much as petrol cars.”
The
researchers attributed most of the gap to overestimates of the “utility factor”
– the ratio of miles travelled in electric mode to the total miles travelled –
finding that 27% of driving was done in electric mode even though official
estimates assumed 84%. The European Commission has announced two corrections to
the utility factor ratio that will narrow the gap but not close it entirely,
according to the analysis.
Even when
the cars were driven in electric mode, the analysis found that levels of
pollution were well above official estimates. The researchers said this was
because electric motors were not strong enough to operate alone, with their
engines burning fossil fuels for almost one-third of the distance travelled in
electric mode.
Patrick
Plötz, head of energy economics at the Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and
Innovation Research, who was not involved in the study, said it was a “very
useful contribution” after years in which parts of the automotive industry
argued there was too little data to accurately assess real-world emissions.
“The
results demonstrate, beyond any doubt, that the gap between official and
real-world PHEV fuel consumption and CO2 emissions is much, much larger than
for gasoline or diesel cars,” said Plötz, who has published research on the
topic. “Any policy changes with respect to PHEVs should be made with utmost
care and in the light of that data.”
Hybrid
cars have been drawn back into the political debate as carmakers have pressed
the EU to weaken CO2 targets. A ban on new combustion engine cars in 2035 has
been subject to heavy lobbying from the automotive industry and opposition from
member states with large car industries.
“There
must not be a drastic cut in 2035,” the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, said
after a summit last week with the country’s struggling automobile industry,
promising to do “everything in [his] power” to achieve that. Other senior
German politicians have floated plug-in hybrids as one example of possible
“flexibilities” they could introduce to the legislation.
The
researchers calculated that the underestimate of PHEV emissions had let four
major carmaker groups avoid more than €5bn (£4.3bn) in fines between 2021 and
2023, by making it artificially easier to comply with the EU’s fleet-average
CO2 targets. They added that drivers of PHEVs would also be paying about €500
more a year in running costs than would be assumed under laboratory tests.
“The bold
claims that manufacturers like to make about their plug-in hybrid vehicles are
clearly way off the mark,” said Colin Walker, a transport analyst at the Energy
and Climate Intelligence Unit.
“Consumers
are being duped into believing that in buying a PHEV, they are helping the
environment and saving money,” he said. “In reality, PHEVs are little better
than regular petrol and diesel cars when it comes to the fuel they consume, the
CO2 they produce and the money they cost to run.”
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