Toyota proves there is a market for hybrids

 WHILE AUSTRALIA HAS BEEN slower than most other countries (thanks in large part to the refusal of governments to offer any incentives) to adopt hybrid and electric vehicles, Toyota has proven that there is a viable market for hybrids, at least. 

Local sales of Toyota’s hybrid vehicles have soared to all-time records on the back of surging demand for their combination of performance and fuel-efficiency.

Australian customers have bought a record 7597 Toyota hybrids so far this year, a gain of 166 percent over the same period last year, with hybrids accounting for more than half of all RAV4, Corolla and Camry sales.

The hybrid tally so far in 2020 represents almost one-quarter of the company’s sales (23.4 percent) compared with fewer than 10 percent (8.8 percent) for the same period last year.

It means Toyota hybrids, as a stand-alone franchise, would now rank seventh in the market compared with 13th last year when hybrid deliveries hit a calendar-year record of 27,846 vehicles.

The Camry hybrid is in wide service as a taxi, but more private buyers are coming on board

Last month, hybrid sales were the highest for any month since the company began selling hybrids in 2001 with the Prius.

Almost 4500 hybrids were delivered to customers in February (4497) – the first-time hybrids have exceeded 25 percent of Toyota’s overall sales (25.4 percent).

Toyota Australia Vice President Sales and Marketing Sean Hanley said demand for hybrids was accelerating faster than expected, resulting in the company lifting its 2020 target well above the original forecast of 40,000 sales.

Mr Hanley said inquiry and consideration of hybrids had skyrocketed over the past 12 months with online searches doubling for “Toyota hybrid”, along with a similar uptick in unique visits to specific toyota.com.au “hybrid” pages.

“We successfully negotiated additional shipments of hybrid vehicles that will arrive throughout 2020, but even these higher supplies are under pressure due to the unprecedented popularity of hybrids,” Mr Hanley said.

“The boom in inquiry, consideration and sales with our latest hybrids underlines the success of Toyota’s global strategy to popularise electrified vehicles to reduce fuel consumption and carbon dioxide emissions,” he said.

“At the same time, it means that delivery times for some variants will not improve as quickly as we had anticipated. While this is clearly not desirable, we will keep negotiating for an even greater share of global production. We’ll continue to keep our customers updated through our dealers. And, after seeing the journey of hybrid vehicles over the past 20 years, I know they’re truly worth the wait.”

The popularity of hybrid vehicles in February propelled RAV4 to second and Corolla to fourth on the top-sellers list, which continues to be led by Toyota’s HiLux.

RAV4 hybrids represented an astonishing 62.1 percent of the model’s total sales, passing the 2,000-sales mark for the first time (2097). Camry hybrids were at 61.2 percent (884 vehicles) and Corolla hybrids at 51.9 percent (1309 vehicles).