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E-scooter popularity expected to grow despite challenges, reports IDTechEx

E-scooter usage is expected to continue to grow, according to research by IDTechEx.

The report highlights opportunity to expand the market across India and Southeast Asia as growth in China is set to slow due to saturation.

It also focuses on the steady growth of electric motorcycles in Europe, despite challenges the segment faces on attitudes, cost and performance.

Two-wheeler popularity in Asia

Asia accounts for more than 90% of all global two-wheeler sales, and it is unusual for a family not to own one in some countries. 

The three largest markets ranked by annual sales are China, India, and Southeast Asia. 

When compared to cars, light electric two-wheelers are much easier to produce, are subject to significantly fewer regulations, can carry lower price tags, and are likely to entice a wider range of riders.

The reasons for growth in these regions include personal disposable incomes remaining low on average, making cars unaffordable; fuel inflation rates making the direct cost of owning a petrol vehicle high and; dense and crowded urban centres with slow-moving traffic making two-wheelers the transport of choice.

The market for electric scooters and motorcycles is booming outside of China as more countries are looking to shift away from ICE counterparts. 

While China is the largest market by sales volume, sales boomed early and are now on the decline. 

IDTechEx expects growing markets like Vietnam and India to take up larger market shares in the coming years as Chinese sales decline.

Both China and India, being the largest domestic production and sales markets for two-wheelers globally, export products overseas as well. 

Two-wheeler export performance is expected to increase due to increased requirements of e-commerce and last-mile deliveries in many export markets.

The latest report from IDTechEx, “Micro EVs 2023-2043: Electric Two-Wheelers, Three-Wheelers, and Microcars”, includes a comprehensive analysis of the Indian, Chinese, and Southeast Asian electric two-wheeler market, covering model benchmarking, OEM market shares, and a 20-year sales forecast split by battery type and motor power.

China: A saturated market

The electric two-wheeler market in China has been growing for twenty years (with lead-acid batteries), driven by the need to travel quickly around cities and the relative unaffordability of the car (consumer preference). 

The S curve has already happened: the market peaked at more than 30 million sales in 2016 and was expected to decline steadily. 

However, due to the introduction of a new national technical standard in 2019, sales are expected to peak once again (only briefly during the transition period spanning 2019-2025) before stabilising and exhibiting negative growth rates.

The 2019 regulation will drive the uptake of Li-ion batteries from 27% in 2022 to over 90% by 2040, according to IDTechEx forecasts.

India: A growing market

India is one of the largest two-wheeler markets in the world. The two-wheeler is the most preferred means of commuting for the Indian population. India has witnessed strong growth in electric two-wheeler sales in recent years.

The main factors driving sales growth are supportive government policies, lower total cost of ownership, rising fuel prices, increased localisation of electric two-wheeler manufacturing, and adoption of e-commerce platforms. 

In terms of power split, IDTechEx anticipates that the market will be dominated by <4 kW e-scooters that have reached price parity with ICE equivalent models. IDTechEx expects the models with >4 kW of power to slowly increase in sales as battery prices fall. 

Southeast Asia: ICE dominant with opportunity for electrification

The two-wheeler market is dominated by ICE two-wheelers in Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam —collectively the Southeast Asian market leaders. 

The 2&3W sales in these four market leaders account for over 90% of total 2&3W sales in Southeast Asian countries. The market share of electric two-wheelers in Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines is relatively small, with less than 1.5% of all two-wheelers sold in these countries.

Vietnam has the largest share of electric two-wheelers among these countries, and it grew substantially, from 5% in 2019 to 8% in 2020 and 10% in 2021.

The use of battery swapping to eliminate charging woes is seeing prominence as well. In 2022, about 470,000 electric two-wheelers (mainly low-power e-scooters) were sold, with IDTechEx forecasting sales to cross over 9 million units by 2043.

India will overtake China to become the largest electric two-wheeler market. Source: IDTechEx

Electric motorcycle market to grow steadily although challenges exist

The scooter segment has a higher number of electric models on offer (thanks to various Chinese products sold overseas) and offers a much lower total cost of ownership compared to ICE counterparts. This explains their popularity and growth.

Electric motorcycles, however, remain a premium niche segment that must appeal to a crowd of enthusiastic riders. High-performance electric motorcycles are now coming to market, aiming to offer the thrills without the emissions. Italy is the largest European market, followed by Spain, France, Germany, and UK.

These countries account for about 80% of electric motorcycle registrations in the EU+UK block. An upward trend in sales for the last three consecutive years is noticed across most countries, confirming the attractiveness of electric motorcycles.

Motorcycles in the US are predominantly ridden for enjoyment and as part of a lifestyle choice; this, in turn, makes it harder to sell the electric motorcycle because of the nostalgia and lifestyle associated with ‘loud pipes’.

Electric motorcycles offer a variety of motor power outputs based on their type – everyday cruisers typically use lower-power motors, whereas performance superbikes use high-power motors.

The general takeaway found from IDTechEx benchmarking is that e-motorcycles with a premium price tag (around ~US$15,000) use larger capacity batteries and powerful motors (often based on a higher voltage platform 120-400 V).

Read more: Tier announces partnership with safety sunglasses brand Hindsight 

In contrast, more entry-level variants offer performance more comparable to some premium e-scooters (often using similar componentry packaged in a motorcycle frame).

In the case of zero-emission motorcycles, particularly in the premium market segments, current product availability, price point, the current state of electric bike technology, and rider acceptability suggest that much more will need to happen before this market takes off. 

Today, battery-powered motorcycles have a much shorter range than typical petrol models, as the extra weight from batteries increases the overall weight.

Incumbent Kawasaki’s target for electrification is to convert small displacement commuter motorcycles and mopeds that emphasise practicality and have a shorter range.

However, brands like Energica and Zero Motorcycles are tackling this challenge head-on and launching high-performance models at a premium cost. IDTechEx’s latest report, “Micro EVs 2023-2043: Electric Two-Wheelers, Three-Wheelers, and Microcars”, covers the electric motorcycle market across various regions and benchmarks models from leading players, along with insights into the opportunity for growth within this segment.

To find out more about this IDTechEx report, visit www.IDTechEx.com/microEVs.

Daniel Blackham

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