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Suzuki, Toyota receive lowest scores in Greenpeace auto ranking

Suzuki in 2023 received the lowest score in Greenpeace East Asia’s annual auto ranking, followed by Great Wall Motor and Toyota.

Toyota
Toyota Europe offices

China’s largest automaker, SAIC, saw the highest volume of electric vehicle (EV) sales, but took just third place in the ranking due to its slow progress on supply chain decarbonisaton.

“Unfortunately, automaking giants like Toyota, Volkswagen and Hyundai aren’t reducing their emissions as quickly as many people believe. Despite rapid growth in EV sales, a staggering 94 percent of cars sold last year by the world’s biggest traditional automakers were powered by fossil fuels.

“Industry leaders like Toyota and Hyundai continue to flood the roads with combustion engine vehicles and a growing number of SUVs. Leading automakers need to accelerate the shift away from fossil fossils, rather than boasting about their minimal EV sales share,” said Greenpeace East Asia Deputy Programme Director, Ada Kong.

The ranking evaluates the world’s 15 largest traditional automakers on their phase-out of combustion engine vehicles, supply chain decarbonisaton, and resource reduction and circularity. Findings are based on Greenpeace analysis of MarkLines data.

Key Findings

Suzuki, Great Wall Motor and Toyota received the lowest scores in the ranking. Toyota is the world’s largest automaker, yet fewer than one in 400 vehicles sold by Toyota in 2022 were battery electric vehicles (BEVs). Suzuki sold zero BEVs in 2022.

Mercedes-Benz and BMW received the top scores in this year’s ranking, but both automakers continue to sell more combustion engine vehicles than is compatible with limiting the global average temperature increase to 1.5˚C.

SAIC reported the highest volume of EV sales, but took just third place due to its slow progress on supply chain decarbonisaton. In 2022, three out of 10 vehicles sold by SAIC were EVs.

Great Wall Motor and Hyundai-Kia continue to grow their SUV sales, worsening climate risk. In 2022, the share of SUVs in Hyundai-Kia’s total sales surpassed 50% for the first time. Due to high steel consumption and low fuel efficiency, SUVs have a larger carbon footprint than smaller vehicles.

Traditional automakers have sold few EVs outside of China and Europe. SAIC is the only automaker included in the ranking with sizable zero-emission vehicle sales in India, Thailand, and Indonesia. Automakers continue to sell high numbers of combustion engine vehicles in the Global South, which is inconsistent with the automakers’ climate commitments.

Greenpeace urges automakers to adopt ambitious zero-emission vehicle transition strategies worldwide, adding that automakers should end the sale of combustion engine vehicles in Europe by 2028 and in the US, China, Korea, and Japan before 2030.

The group added that the transition to electric vehicles must be implemented alongside investment in battery recycling, decarbonisation of the steel supply chain, and a just transition for auto industry workers.

“Ultimately, we need traditional automakers to dramatically speed up their adoption of electric vehicles. Brands like Toyota and Hyundai face a very real market threat from all-electric vehicle-makers like Tesla and BYD, but in the face of evolving technology, they’re dragging their feet,” said Kong.

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