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Hong Kong government must lead charge and keep electric car sales moving with incentives, campaigners say
- Wheels could come off bid to end use of traditional cars if government ends tax breaks to make electric vehicles more attractive, campaigners warn
- Head of city’s motor trade association Joseph Lau says members want gradual reduction of 10 per cent a year over next decade
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Efforts to phase out internal combustion engine private cars in Hong Kong may hit a roadblock if a tax break to encourage a switch to electric vehicles (EVs) is halted, advocates have warned.
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They called for a one-for-one replacement scheme for buyers who changed to EVs to be extended after March 31 next year, when it is scheduled to reach the end of the road.
But the government has so far given no indication whether the scheme will be continued.
Joseph Lau, the chairman of the Motor Traders Association of Hong Kong, said the government should continue the one-for-one scheme as it had been successful in encouraging drivers to change.
He warned that ending or scaling down the scheme would stall the city’s attempt to achieve zero roadside emissions.
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