Thursday, 30 January 2025
Home Topics Transport Automotive IKEA Foundation backs emerging market EV push with $100 million grant
AutomotiveBusinessElectric Vehicles (EVs)NewsTransport

IKEA Foundation backs emerging market EV push with $100 million grant

72
FILE PHOTO: An electric battery charger is displayed at CTEK exhibition at The London EV Show, in London, Britain November 30, 2023. A global initiative to accelerate EV uptake has received a $100 million funding boost from the IKEA Foundation. REUTERS/Maja Smiejkowska/File Photo

By Simon Jessop and Virginia Furness

LONDON (Reuters) – A global initiative to accelerate electric vehicle uptake has received a $100 million funding boost from the IKEA Foundation to help developing countries bypass gasoline-driven vehicles and go straight to the greener alternative.

The Drive Electric Campaign, whose partners also include the European Climate Foundation, said the IKEA Foundation’s latest funding donation would be used to help support lobbying efforts and campaign for the EV transition in Africa, Latin America and Southeast Asia under an initiative to be called the “Leapfrogging Partnership”.

The world’s emerging economies are set to account for the bulk of growth in demand for cars, trucks, buses and two- or three-wheeled vehicles by 2050, and the hope is that investing in the countries now can help ensure the growth is all electric.

“Road transportation accounts for roughly 15% of energy related greenhouse gas emissions so if we are serious about a global transition towards 1.5 degrees of global warming then we cannot reduce emissions without it,” IKEA Foundation’s portfolio manager for the real economy, Edgar van de Brug, told Reuters.

The grant, one of the IKEA Foundation’s largest ever charitable donations, will support local partners working to tackle key barriers to expansion like limited charging infrastructure and a lack of EV-friendly policies, as they seek to create better market conditions to unlock public and private finance, he added.

Collectively, the grant could help save around 43 gigatons of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) by 2050 in countries including Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia and South Africa, Drive Electric Campaign said.

The expansion of the funding follows success in other countries including India, where the electrification of last-mile delivery for parcels in urban areas was “taking off at a massive scale”, van de Brug said.

In addition to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving clean air, EVs can also benefit the wider economy by accelerating battery development, driving down costs and improving storage capacity, van de Brug said.

“Electrification of road transportation is one of the super leverage points… that could help reduce emissions in more than 10 sectors of our economy,” he said.

Drive Electric Program Director Rebecca Fisher said the broader societal benefits of moving to electric were also marked.

“We know that communities are already experiencing the benefits of e-mobility, from delivery drivers saving money on fuel to public transit workers breathing cleaner air… Now is the time to supercharge the momentum of EV innovation with ambitious public policy, business leadership, and strong partnerships.”

(This story has been corrected to say European Climate Foundation is a partner of the Drive Electric Campaign, not an investor, in paragraph 2)

(Reporting by Simon Jessop; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Related Articles

Critical MineralsElectricityMineralsNuclear Power

Column-Nuclear revival puts uranium back in the critical spotlight: Andy Home

Uranium's inclusion on the U.S. critical mineral list would open up federal...

FILE PHOTO: An oil pump of IPC Petroleum France is seen at sunset outside Soudron, near Reims, France, August 24, 2022. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/File Photo
BusinessFuelOil

Oil steady as markets await clarity on tariffs by Trump on Canada, Mexico

Analysts say traders have already priced in Trump's tariffs: "(this is) a...

FILE PHOTO: Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks during the Prime Minister's Questions at the House of Commons in London, Britain, January 29, 2025. ©House of Commons/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
ClimateEmissionsLegislationPoliticsUnited Nations

Britain submits plans to hit emissions-cutting target

Starmer raised Britain's climate targets at COP29, pledging to cut greenhouse gas...

Login into your Account

Please login to like, dislike or bookmark this article.