0.43 percent of petrol cars sold in Norway – this car goes against the grain

The number of newly registered petrol cars is dropping drastically in Norway. So far, only 23 gas stations have been registered in August. But there is a petrol car that sells well.

In 2024, the registration statistics in Norway spoke clearly – the time of petrol cars is over.

The new registrations of petrol cars have fallen clearly during the year and so far in August, 23 petrol cars have been registered. In the same period last year, 80 petrol cars were newly registered, reports motor.no.

The underlying reason is a clear policy that favors electric cars, and they now make up 94.1 percent of new car sales.

There are still no electric cars with all the features we can find in exhaust cars, and therefore some diesel cars are still sold.

The Suzuki Swift 4×4 with a 1.2-liter petrol engine is the exception that confirms the rule about petrol cars in Norway. Photo: Suzuki

Petrol cars can hardly be sold in Norway, with one clear exception: the Suzuki Swift. It is a small and relatively cheap four-wheel drive car that costs NOK 340,000.

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