The British government on Tuesday revealed the first nine electric vehicles that will be eligible for their purchasers to receive subsidies of up to £5,000 under a plan to promote low-carbon transport.
Under the scheme, the government has pledged £43 million until the end of March 2012 to help British motorists shift to low-carbon vehicles.
Eligible vehicles are Mitsubishi’s iMiEV, Daimler’s smart fortwo electric drive, Peugeot’s iON, Citroen’s CZero, the Nissan Leaf, the Tata Vista electric vehicle; the Toyota Prius Plug-in, Vauxhall’s Ampera and General Motors’ Chevrolet Volt.
They will receive up to £5,000 towards the purchase of a low-carbon car from January 2011 to the end of March 2012.
Subsequently, the level of the grant will be reviewed according to vehicle cost and the development of the market.
The government said it would announce more eligible cars next year.
“The British public has, in the past, shown it’s ready to embrace new technology and take practical steps to adopt a lifestyle kinder to the environment, so we could really be at the start of something big,” transport secretary Philip Hammond said in a statement.
Five regions — the Midlands, Greater Manchester, east England, Scotland and Northern Ireland — have successfully bid for a share of a 20 million pound fund to install local charging points for electric vehicles, the government added.