Local Government: Motor Vehicles

(asked on 24th February 2022) - View Source

Question to the Department for Transport:

To ask Her Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the support local authorities require to transfer widespread adoption of (1) electric, and (2) hydrogen, vehicles; and what financial assistance they have allocated to local authorities specifically to support this.


Answered by
Baroness Vere of Norbiton Portrait
Baroness Vere of Norbiton
Parliamentary Secretary (HM Treasury)
This question was answered on 4th March 2022

Building on the £1.9bn from Spending Review 2020, the Government has committed an additional £620m to support the transition to electric vehicles. This additional funding will support the rollout of charging infrastructure, with a particular focus on local, on-street residential charging, and targeted plug-in vehicle grants. The total funding committed by this government to vehicle grants and infrastructure is £2.5bn.

Our upcoming electric vehicle (EV) Infrastructure Strategy will soon be published, which will set out our vision to create a world-leading charging infrastructure network across the UK. Local authorities have a key role in planning and enabling the delivery of EV chargepoints to meet the needs of their local communities and areas, with particular focus on supporting those who do not have access to off-street parking. We are working closer than ever with local authorities to encourage uptake of central government funding for EV chargepoints and ensure more widespread regional and local action in this space.

The On-Street Residential Chargepoint Scheme is available to all UK local authorities to help provide public chargepoints for their residents. This year, £20 million is available under the scheme to ensure more local authorities and residents can benefit. We will also launch our new Local EV Infrastructure Fund (LEVI). Details of how local EV charging will be supported will be announced in due course.

Our bold and ambitious Transport Decarbonisation Plan sets out how we intend to reduce the UK’s transport emissions and forge a realistic pathway to net-zero by 2050. A key aspect of the plan is setting out the role different technologies like hydrogen fuel cells could play across all areas of transport, including HGVs, buses, rail, shipping and aviation. The Transport Decarbonisation Plan has recently been joined by the (BEIS-led) publication of the UK Hydrogen Strategy, which brings together the UK’s hydrogen story, showcasing activity to-date, and setting out an action plan for the UK’s hydrogen economy moving forward, including in the transport sector.

We are providing over £525 million funding for Zero Emission Buses (ZEBs) this Parliament. The Government announced the first areas to be awarded funding from the Zero Emission Bus Regional Areas (ZEBRA) scheme fast track in October 2021. A second group of local transport authorities will be submitting proposals to secure funding through the standard process of the scheme. Funding will be awarded to successful areas in Spring 2022. £355 million of new funding was made available for ZEBs at the Spending Review. £150 million of this new funding is for 2021-22 and has been allocated to the ZEBRA scheme, bringing the total funding for ZEBRA to £270m. The remaining funding is available over the Spending Review period.

The Government’s approach to the delivery of the ZEBs is technology neutral. Local areas have been able to apply for funding for both battery electric buses and hydrogen fuel cell buses depending on which technology is best suited to their local areas.

As of December 2021, there are fourteen publicly accessible hydrogen refuelling stations across the UK. Future Government support for the deployment of additional hydrogen refuelling infrastructure will be linked to specific research and development programmes, such as our pioneering  zero emission road freight trials that will demonstrate hydrogen fuel cell HGVs on UK roads. Our £23 million Hydrogen for Transport Programme (HTP) is increasing the number of publicly accessible hydrogen refuelling stations.

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