Norway to ban petrol cars by 2025

By 2025 electric cars such as this Tesla Model 3 will be the only kind you can buy in Norway.

By 2025 electric cars such as this Tesla Model 3 will be the only kind you can buy in Norway.

Published Jun 6, 2016

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Oslo - Norway will reportedly ban the sale of all fossil fuel-based cars in the next decade, continuing its trend towards becoming one of the most ecologically progressive countries on the planet.

Politicians from both sides of the political spectrum have reached some concrete conclusions about 100 percent of Norwegian cars running on green energy by 2025, according to the country''s media.

Norwegian newspaper Dagens Naeringsliv reports that FRP will remove all gasoline cars, a headline that makes reference to the populist right-wing Framstegspartiet, or Progress Party.

Yet there is some denial from other right-wing representatives that the move has been confirmed.

If passed, it would be particularly significant because a large proportion of Norway''s funds rely on the country''s petroleum industry.

The report also follows the announcement that Norway will become the first country in the world to commit to zero deforestation.

Also read:  The one country where electric cars rule

Speaking about the possible 2025 ban on non-electric cars, Elon Musk, chief executive of US electric car company Tesla Motors, lauded the announcement.

“Just heard that Norway will ban new sales of fuel cars in 2025,” he wrote. “What an amazingly awesome country. You guys rock!”

Yet while the Democratic Party and the Liberal Party have corroborated Dagens Naeringsliv’s report, the FRP have said the move is still being looked at.

If the measure is fully confirmed, it would be more ambitious than the Labour Party''s proposal that no new diesel or petrol cars should be sold by 2030.

The four parties, who rule together through a system of proportional representation, have also agreed a new climate tax on electricity.

About 24 percent of the country's cars already run on electricity, and it is a heavy producer of renewable energy with more than 99 percent of its electricity covered by hydropower.

Norway also aims to triple its capacity of wind power by 2020, with a new $3 billion (R44.8 billion) investment in the sector approved in 2013.

The Independent

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