Europe’s EV Sales Surge as Iran War Drives Oil Prices Through the Roof
Europe’s EV registrations jumped 51% in March 2026 as oil prices topped $100 a barrel following the Iran war. Chinese brands are capturing the biggest gains, with BYD enquiries up 25,000% on Carwow.
Background
War has a way of rewriting consumer habits overnight. Since US and Israeli airstrikes hit Iran at the end of February, crude oil has soared past $100 a barrel for the first time since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. The result at Europe’s petrol pumps has been immediate and painful.
The result at EV dealerships has been the opposite. Battery-electric vehicle registrations jumped 51% in March across 14 key EU and EFTA markets, with more than 224,000 new EVs registered in a single month. That brought EVs to 22% of all new car sales in those countries.
For the full first quarter, EU countries registered more than 500,000 new electric vehicles—a 33.5% increase on the same period last year.
Impact
The Iran conflict has effectively shut down shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, threatening roughly one-fifth of global oil supply. The International Energy Agency called it the greatest global energy security challenge in history. For European drivers already squeezed by years of high living costs, the pump price spike was the final push.
Winners and Losers
Chinese brands have been the biggest beneficiaries. Purchase enquiries for BYD on Carwow’s platform grew by a staggering 25,000%. Leapmotor saw a 436% jump, and Xpeng rose 153%.
These numbers reflect online interest rather than deliveries, but the trend is translating into real sales. Tesla’s European registrations have collapsed amid boycotts linked to Elon Musk’s political activities, opening a gap that Chinese manufacturers are racing to fill.
Traditional carmakers are feeling the shift too. Renault said 50% of its UK registrations in April were EVs. Its Renault 5 became Britain’s best-selling electric car that month. Volvo Cars reported rising orders, especially for its entry-level EX30 compact SUV.
On the second-hand market, OLX reported an 80% jump in EV enquiries on its French platform since hostilities started.