Plug-in electric vehicles in the United States (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Plug-in electric vehicles in the United States" in English language version.

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  • European Automobile Manufacturers Association (ACEA) (4 February 2021). "New Passenger Car Registrations By Fuel Type In The European Union: Quarter 4 2020" (PDF). ACEA. Retrieved 5 February 2020. See table: Total Electric Rechargeable Vehicles (ECV) - New Passenger Car Registrations By Market In The EU + EFTA. Shows Total registrations for EU + EFTA + UK in Q1-Q4 20199 and 2020. A total of 1,364,813 plug-in cars were registered in 2020, up from 559,871 in 2019 (+143.8%).

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  • King, Danny (29 December 2016). "China far ahead of US, Europe in total electric vehicle sales". Autoblog.com. Retrieved 8 January 2017. Last year, China overtook both the US and Europe in annual sales of electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids. This year, it will move ahead of both the US and Europe in cumulative plug-in vehicle sales.

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  • China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) (14 January 2021). "Sales of New Energy Vehicles in December 2020". CAAM. Retrieved 8 February 2021. NEV sales in China totaled 1.637 million in 2020, consisting of 1.246 million passenger cars and 121,000 commercial vehicles.
  • China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) (12 January 2022). "Sales of New Energy Vehicles in December 2021". CAAM. Retrieved 13 January 2022. NEV sales in China totaled 3.521 million in 2021 (all classes), consisting of 3.334 million passenger cars and 186,000 commercial vehicles.

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  • Electric Drive Transportation Association (EDTA) (January 2020). "Electric Drive Sales Dashboard". EDTA. Retrieved 30 May 2020. : U.S. auto industry sales reporting methodology changed significantly beginning in October 2019, when many automakers ended monthly reporting or moved to an overall quarterly sales report without model breakdowns. Sales figures sourced from HybridCars.com up to 2017 and direct reports submitted by EDTA member companies

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  • Jeff Cobb (8 January 2013). "December 2012 Dashboard". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Retrieved 14 January 2013. See the section: U.S. Plug-in Electric sales for December 2012. A total of 53,172 plug-in electric vehicles were sold during 2012. Sales of the Fisker Karma, Coda and Wheego are not included in this figure, because these carmakers does not report monthly sales on a regular basis. Tesla Model S sales are estimated.
  • Cobb, Jeff (6 January 2016). "December 2015 Dashboard". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Retrieved 14 March 2016. Plug-in electric car sales in the U.S. totaled 114,248 units in 2015, consisting of 71,105 all-electric cars and 43,143 plug-in hybrids, with corresponding market shares of 0.25% and 0.41%. Sales in 2014 totaled 123,347 units.
  • Cobb, Jeff (4 January 2018). "December 2017 Dashboard". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Retrieved 21 January 2018. Plug-in electric car sales in the U.S. totaled 194,479 units in 2017, consisting of 104,487 all-electric cars and 89,992 plug-in hybrids. The plug-in car segment achieved a market share of 1.13% of new car sales.
  • Cobb, Jeff (22 January 2018). "Tesla Quietly Sold 200,000th Model S Last Year". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 22 January 2018. "Tesla sold its 200,000 Model S in the fourth quarter of 2017, in October or early November, becoming the second plug-in car to cross this sales threshold after the Nissan Leaf (300,000 units by early 2017). As of December 2017, Tesla reported global sales of 212,874 Model S cars."
  • Cobb, Jeff (11 January 2017). "America's Plug-in Car Sales Were Their Best Ever in 2016". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Retrieved 12 January 2017. Plug-in electric car sales in the U.S. totaled 157,181 units, up 37.6% from 2015 (114,248). The plug-in car segment achieved an all-time high market share of 0.90% of new car sales in 2016. The top selling model for the second year in a row was the Tesla Model S with 29,156 units sold in 2016, followed by the Chevrolet Volt (24,739), Tesla Model X (18,028), Ford Energi Fusion (15,938), and the Nissan Leaf (14,006). As of December 2016, cumulative sales totaled 570,187 plug-in cars since 2008, with the Chevrolet Volt as the all-time best selling plug-in car with 113,489 units. The Tesla Model S ranks third with an estimated 92,317 units since its inception in 2012.
  • "US Tax Incentives for Plug-in Hybrids and Electric Cars". HybridCars.com. 8 March 2010. Archived from the original on 11 March 2010. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
  • Jeff Cobb (7 December 2012). "Energy Department Backs Plan To Develop Five-Times More Energy Dense EV Battery". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  • Cobb, Jeff (17 January 2017). "Top 10 Plug-in Vehicle Adopting Countries of 2016". HybridCars.com. Archived from the original on 1 March 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  • Cobb, Jeff (27 December 2016). "China Takes Lead As Number One In Plug-in Vehicle Sales". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 6 January 2017. As of November 2016, cumulative sales of plug-in electric vehicles in China totaled 846,447 units, including passenger and commercial vehicles, making the country the world's leader in overall plug-in electric vehicle sales. With cumulative sales of about 600,000 plug-in electric passenger cars through November 2016, China is also the global leader in the plug-in passenger vehicle segment, ahead of Europe and the U.S.
  • Jeff Cobb (18 February 2015). "Top 6 Plug-In Vehicle Adopting Countries – 2014". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  • Cobb, Jeff (15 June 2016). "Europe Buys Its 500,000th Plug-in Vehicle". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 15 June 2016. As of May 2016, cumulative sales by country are led by the United States with a stock of more than 460,000 highway legal light-duty plug-in electric vehicles delivered since 2008. China ranks second with almost 390,000 units sold since 2011, followed by Japan with over 150,000 plug-ins sold between 2009 and April 2016. Europe is the largest regional market with more than 500,000 plug-in electric passenger cars and vans registered through May 2016.
  • Cobb, Jeff (17 October 2016). "China Now Ties US For Leadership In Cumulative Global Plug-In Sales". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 17 October 2016. As of September 2016, the U.S. and China are technically tied for first place as the world's largest plug-in passenger car market. The U.S. has cumulative plug-in car sales of 522,519 units while China has 521,649 domestically produced plug-in cars. Europe is still the world's largest regional market with almost 50,000 more units sold that both countries, totaling about 570,000 light-duty plug-in vehicles.
  • Cobb, Jeff (5 January 2017). "December 2016 Dashboard". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Retrieved 6 January 2017. Plug-in electric car sales in the U.S. totaled 157,181 units, consisting of 84,246 all-electric cars and 72,935 plug-in hybrids. The plug-in car segment achieved a market share of 0.90% of new car sales. December sales totaled 23,288 units with a market share of 1.39%. The top selling model in 2016 was the Tesla Model S with 29,156 units sold, followed by the Chevrolet Volt (24,739) and the Tesla Model X (18,028).
  • Jeff Cobb (6 January 2014). "December 2013 Dashboard". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Archived from the original on 28 March 2019. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
  • Jeff Cobb (6 January 2015). "December 2014 Dashboard". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Archived from the original on 2 September 2020. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  • Cobb, Jeff (26 July 2016). "Top-Selling Chevy Volt Crosses 100,000 US Sales Milestone". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 26 July 2016. As of June 2016, around 117,000 units of the Volt/Ampera family have been sold globally, including close to 10,000 Opel/Vauxhall Ampera variants sold in Europe. Volt sales in the American market passed the 100,000 milestone in July 2016.
  • Cobb, Jeff (1 November 2016). "Nissan Leaf Second Plug-in Ever To Sell 100,000 In US". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 1 November 2016. Since December 2010, about 239,000 Leafs have been sold worldwide through September 2016. The U.S. is the world's largest market with 100,241 units sold through October 2016. Ranking second is Japan with 69,833 units followed by Europe with about 63,000 units, both, through September 2016.
  • "HybridCars Dashboard". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Retrieved 25 January 2019. Sales reporting ended in June 2018.
  • Cobb, Jeff (1 September 2016). "Americans Buy Their Half-Millionth Plug-in Car". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 2 September 2016. See other figures in graphs.
  • Jeff Cobb (9 September 2014). "Americans Buy Their 250,000th Plug-In Car". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 9 September 2014. As of August 2014, sales are led by the Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid with 67,698 units, followed by the Nissan Leaf electric car with 61,063 units. The total of 250,609 units sold includes 1,800 Roadsters, 1,600 Fisker Karmas, and 500 Mini Es usually not captured by most statistics.
  • Cobb, Jeff (9 August 2016). "California Continues To Pull More Than Its Weight In Plug-in Car Sales". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 29 August 2016. As of July 2016, California's plug-in car concentration was 5.83 registrations per 1,000 people, the U.S. was 1.51 per 1,000. Norway exceeds California by 3.69 times, California narrowly outpaces the Netherlands by 1.04 times.
  • Cobb, Jeff (1 September 2016). "Americans Buy Their Half-Millionth Plug-in Car: Concentration of plug-in electrified car registrations per 1,000 people". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 4 September 2016. As of July 2016, Norway had a concentration of registered plug-in cars per 1,000 people of 21.52, the Netherlands of 5.63, California of 5.83, and the United States national average was 1.52.
  • Cobb, Jeff (9 February 2017). "There Are Now More Plug-in Cars For Sale In the US Than Hybrids". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  • Jeff Cobb (13 August 2014). "Has The Electrification Revolution Fizzled?". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 13 August 2014.
  • Jeff Cobb (14 November 2014). "Eight Perks of Owning an Electric Car". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  • Cobb, Jeff (16 January 2018). "Top 5 Best Selling Plug-in Cars – 2017". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 21 January 2018. The top 5 selling models in the U.S. in 2017 were the Tesla Model S with about 26,500 units, followed by the Chevrolet Bolt (23,297), Tesla Model X (~21,700), Toyota Prius Prime (20,936), and the Chevrolet Volt (20,349). The five best sellers accounted for 112,782 sales out of the 194,479 (58%).
  • Jeff Cobb (3 November 2015). "2016 Volts Account For 1,324 Sales Out Of 2,035 October Deliveries". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 3 November 2015.
  • Cobb, Jeff (2 November 2016). "October 2016 Dashboard". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Retrieved 4 November 2016. Tesla sales for 3Q 2016 have been restated based upon information provided from the company corresponding to U.S. sales during 3Q 2016. Tesla reported 9,156 Model S and 5,428 Model X sold during the third quarter of 2016. The combined effect of both models totaled 1,116 less units than originally estimated, so the revised current-year-to-date figure for sales through September is 108,397 units. The revised CYTD figure for Model S is 20,856 and 12,328 for the Model X. October sales figures already reflect this adjustment.
  • Cobb, Jeff (2 December 2016). "November 2016 Dashboard". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Retrieved 3 December 2016.

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  • International Energy Agency (IEA), Clean Energy Ministerial, and Electric Vehicles Initiative (EVI) (June 2020). "Global EV Outlook 2020: Entering the decade of electric drive?". IEA Publications. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 May 2021. Retrieved 15 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) See Statistical annex, pp. 247–252 (See Tables A.1 and A.12). The global stock of plug-in electric passenger vehicles totaled 7.2 million cars at the end of 2019, of which, 47% were on the road in China. The stock of plug-in cars consist of 4.8 million battery electric cars (66.6%) and 2.4 million plug-in hybrids (33.3%). In addition, the stock of light commercial plug-in electric vehicles in use totaled 378 thousand units in 2019, and about half a million electric buses were in circulation, most of which are in China.
  • International Energy Agency (IEA), Clean Energy Ministerial, and Electric Vehicles Initiative (EVI) (May 2018). "Global EV Outlook 2017: 3 million and counting" (PDF). IEA Publications. pp. 9–10, 19–23, 29–28, and Statistical annex, pp. 107–113. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 June 2020. Retrieved 22 October 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

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  • Schmidt, Matthias (11 January 2022). "The West European 2021 electric car market data". Schmidt Automotive Research. Retrieved 11 January 2022. West European new BEV passenger car registrations reached 1.2M units (1,190,000) in 2021 according to provisional Schmidt Automotive Research data. With PHEVs (1.02M) added to the equation, plug-ins accounted for every fifth (21%) new passenger cars in 2021 (2.21M) or a 66% volume increase over full year 2020.

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  • Cobb, Jeff (22 January 2018). "Tesla Quietly Sold 200,000th Model S Last Year". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 22 January 2018. "Tesla sold its 200,000 Model S in the fourth quarter of 2017, in October or early November, becoming the second plug-in car to cross this sales threshold after the Nissan Leaf (300,000 units by early 2017). As of December 2017, Tesla reported global sales of 212,874 Model S cars."
  • Cobb, Jeff (11 January 2017). "America's Plug-in Car Sales Were Their Best Ever in 2016". HybridCars.com and Baum & Associates. Retrieved 12 January 2017. Plug-in electric car sales in the U.S. totaled 157,181 units, up 37.6% from 2015 (114,248). The plug-in car segment achieved an all-time high market share of 0.90% of new car sales in 2016. The top selling model for the second year in a row was the Tesla Model S with 29,156 units sold in 2016, followed by the Chevrolet Volt (24,739), Tesla Model X (18,028), Ford Energi Fusion (15,938), and the Nissan Leaf (14,006). As of December 2016, cumulative sales totaled 570,187 plug-in cars since 2008, with the Chevrolet Volt as the all-time best selling plug-in car with 113,489 units. The Tesla Model S ranks third with an estimated 92,317 units since its inception in 2012.
  • Cobb, Jeff (27 December 2016). "China Takes Lead As Number One In Plug-in Vehicle Sales". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 6 January 2017. As of November 2016, cumulative sales of plug-in electric vehicles in China totaled 846,447 units, including passenger and commercial vehicles, making the country the world's leader in overall plug-in electric vehicle sales. With cumulative sales of about 600,000 plug-in electric passenger cars through November 2016, China is also the global leader in the plug-in passenger vehicle segment, ahead of Europe and the U.S.
  • Cobb, Jeff (15 June 2016). "Europe Buys Its 500,000th Plug-in Vehicle". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 15 June 2016. As of May 2016, cumulative sales by country are led by the United States with a stock of more than 460,000 highway legal light-duty plug-in electric vehicles delivered since 2008. China ranks second with almost 390,000 units sold since 2011, followed by Japan with over 150,000 plug-ins sold between 2009 and April 2016. Europe is the largest regional market with more than 500,000 plug-in electric passenger cars and vans registered through May 2016.
  • Cobb, Jeff (17 October 2016). "China Now Ties US For Leadership In Cumulative Global Plug-In Sales". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 17 October 2016. As of September 2016, the U.S. and China are technically tied for first place as the world's largest plug-in passenger car market. The U.S. has cumulative plug-in car sales of 522,519 units while China has 521,649 domestically produced plug-in cars. Europe is still the world's largest regional market with almost 50,000 more units sold that both countries, totaling about 570,000 light-duty plug-in vehicles.
  • Cobb, Jeff (26 July 2016). "Top-Selling Chevy Volt Crosses 100,000 US Sales Milestone". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 26 July 2016. As of June 2016, around 117,000 units of the Volt/Ampera family have been sold globally, including close to 10,000 Opel/Vauxhall Ampera variants sold in Europe. Volt sales in the American market passed the 100,000 milestone in July 2016.
  • Jeff Cobb (9 September 2014). "Americans Buy Their 250,000th Plug-In Car". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 9 September 2014. As of August 2014, sales are led by the Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid with 67,698 units, followed by the Nissan Leaf electric car with 61,063 units. The total of 250,609 units sold includes 1,800 Roadsters, 1,600 Fisker Karmas, and 500 Mini Es usually not captured by most statistics.
  • Cobb, Jeff (9 August 2016). "California Continues To Pull More Than Its Weight In Plug-in Car Sales". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 29 August 2016. As of July 2016, California's plug-in car concentration was 5.83 registrations per 1,000 people, the U.S. was 1.51 per 1,000. Norway exceeds California by 3.69 times, California narrowly outpaces the Netherlands by 1.04 times.
  • Cobb, Jeff (1 September 2016). "Americans Buy Their Half-Millionth Plug-in Car: Concentration of plug-in electrified car registrations per 1,000 people". HybridCars.com. Retrieved 4 September 2016. As of July 2016, Norway had a concentration of registered plug-in cars per 1,000 people of 21.52, the Netherlands of 5.63, California of 5.83, and the United States national average was 1.52.

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