All-electric vehicles captured a record amount of total plug-in vehicle battery capacity sold in 2019, 17.4 gigawatt-hours.
September 14, 2020With a 1% increase in sales and increasing battery pack size, all-electric vehicles (EVs) captured a record amount of total plug-in vehicle battery capacity sold in 2019, 17.4 gigawatt-hours. Plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) accounted for a smaller portion of total plug-in vehicle battery capacity due to their lower sales volumes and because they require smaller battery packs than EVs, since they have gasoline-powered engines to extend total vehicle range. PHEV sales decreased 32% from 2018 to 2019, about the same as the decrease in PHEV battery capacity. Calendar year 2018 was the first full year of Tesla Model 3 sales, which accounted for the large increase in total battery capacity between 2017 and 2018.
![Total lithium-ion battery capacity for new electric vehicles sold from 2011 to 2019](/sites/default/files/styles/full_article_width/public/2020/09/f78/fotw1151.png?itok=E88H23Kn)
Source: Argonne National Laboratory, Assessment of Light-Duty Plug-In Electric Vehicles in the United States, 2010 – 2019, June 2020.