Fleet Europe °114

Page 30

FINANCIAL MODELS

RETHINKING TCO FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES Yves Helven

According to a part of the fleet expert community, it’s time to redefine the classic TCO model. Arguments in favour of revamping the old calculation are diverse: the transition from ownership to usership, impact of recyclable elements (batteries) in the automotive industry, volatility of residual values... Some even take into account elements that are external to the asset, such as the cost of congestion or the cost of sustainability. Buying an EV instead of an ICE simply in order to be able to use a vehicle on fast lanes or inside city centres might represent an additional cost indeed. The main question however is not so much the TC part of the calculation. It’s the O.

Linear Economies versus Circular Economies PWC’s “Road to Circularity” portraits in an excellent way the need for a different type of economy. It explains how, since the industrial revolution, industry and wealth-creation have operated in a “take-make-dispose” model, also called the “Linear Economy”. This involves extracting natural resources to make products that are used for a limited time and eventually discarded as waste. Here, the focus is on the product.

FLEET EUROPE #114

The rapid consumption of finite resources (wood, oil, …) and the foreseeable end of their availability, asks for an economy where raw materials can be reused, recycled or reinjected into production; this is the “Circular Economy.” Here, the focus is on the service. Translating both types of economy into the fleet sector, PWC gives the example of BlaBlaCar. This mobility provider allows people to book a seat in a car for a specific ride through social media: you might be traveling from Amsterdam to

Brussels and have 3 free seats in your car. BlaBlaCar makes these seats available to other people. More generically and by extrapolation, PWC is telling us that “usership” of some kind is preferred to “ownership”. Since EVs contain one important ingredient that is both heavy on natural resources and offers the possibility of recycling – its batteries – there’s perhaps a case to be made for EVs in a TCU model rather than a TCO model.

EVs and traditional TCO Research and venture capital firm LoupVentures published an old-school 5-year/75,000-mile TCO comparison between a Tesla Model 3, an Audi A5 and a Toyota Camry LE. It’s an update

Purchase Price

of their 2017 study, which received quite a bit of press at the time. To be noted: this is a US study and therefore all costs are local to the US and in USD.

TESLA MODEL 3

TOYOTA CAMRY LE

AUDI A5

44,200

38,900

24,600

Financing

2,765

468

3,180

Tax, Licence, Title

3,025

2,050

5,405

Insurance

5,640

6,060

8,080

Fuel/Electricity

2,250

8,140

9,910

Maintenance/Repairs

1,200

4,000

8,000

Total

53,780

45,336

78,775

Remarketing Value

18,988

8,905

18,564

Total

34,792

36,431

60,211

0.46

0.49

0.80

Cost per Mile

An old-school 5-year/75,000-mile TCO comparison by research and venture capital firm LoupVentures.

30


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.