European EV orders warm up as fuel prices reshape consumer psychology
Energy prices are again influencing European consumers’ interest in electric cars. Reuters recently reported that Renault management saw a sharp rise in EV orders in several European markets, including France and Germany, since the start of the Iran war, with some markets up by as much as 50%. The same report noted that European EV sales grew by roughly 29% in the first four months, approaching one million units.
This does not mean that all consumers have suddenly changed their values. It shows that cost sensitivity has become stronger. When petrol prices rise, the daily cost advantage of electric cars becomes easier to understand. For city commuters and family users with access to home charging, an EV can look more attractive when fuel prices are volatile.
However, a short-term order surge can also reflect emotion and expectations. Buyers may bring forward purchases if they fear further fuel-price increases. If fuel prices stabilise, demand could also become calmer. CarIndexes therefore does not interpret this as a simple “EV boom”. It is better understood as a market signal created by energy costs, consumer psychology and model availability.
For carmakers, the signal is clear: EV communication cannot rely only on environmental claims. Brands must explain long-term cost, charging convenience and real usage scenarios. For consumers, the same event is a reminder not to compare cars only by the current fuel price, but also by purchase cost, leasing, insurance, electricity cost, residual value and service network.
Public references:Reuters Renault EV orders report;ACEA April 2026 registrations
Disclaimer: This article is an editorial analysis by CarIndexes.com, based on publicly available market information, industry data and media reports. CarIndexes editorial indexes and rankings do not represent official sales rankings, manufacturer positions or investment advice.
Source: Euro International Press
Photo / Image: Image: EIPRESS editorial visual.
This article is based on publicly available information or editorial materials and does not imply endorsement by any institution mentioned unless expressly stated.
Published by Euro International Press (France). Individual readers, schools, associations and non-commercial organisations may republish this article while retaining the title, text and source. Media organisations, commercial websites, news platforms, aggregators and commercial entities should contact info@gche.eu for authorisation, syndication or partnership.
© Euro International Press. All Rights Reserved.