Mitsubishi calls for plug-in hybrid grant to be reinstated

Mitsubishi is leading calls for the UK government to revive its axed financial incentive scheme for buyers of plug-in hybrid vehicles.  The Japanese car maker says that UK owners of its Outlander PHEV hybrid SUV cover half their average weekly mileage in electric mode, substantially lessening the model’s environmental impact. The grant in question, axed in October last year, enhanced the appeal of hybrid vehicles by offering buyers a £2500 – £4500 subsidy depending on the model’s zero-emissions range.  According to a survey commissioned by Mitsubishi but conducted independently, over two thirds of Outlander PHEV owners charge their vehicle daily, with 90% charging at least 2-3 times per week.  Mitsubishi says the results of this survey oppose the notion that PHEVs are rarely plugged in, and are purchased as a means of paying reduced benefit-in-kind tax. The vast majority of Outlander PHEVs are charged at owners’ homes, with only 23% of drivers relying on public charge points, which Mitsubishi says “refutes the misconception that PHEVs are preventing electric vehicles from accessing charging units”.  Mitsubishi says 25% of UK Outlander PHEV owners would consider a pure electric vehicle as their next purchase – implying that incentivising sales of hybrids could help the government in its mission to end the sale of conventionally fuelled vehicles by 2040.  The company’s appeal comes days after it was revealed that UK sales of plug-in hybrids fell by 34.3% in April – a direct result of the government’s abolition of financial incentives for anything but pure-electric vehicles.  The Outlander PHEV is the UK’s biggest-selling plug-in hybrid, with an estimated 45,000 currently on the
Origin: Mitsubishi calls for plug-in hybrid grant to be reinstated

Nova Scotia man fights to have his ‘offensive’ plate reinstated

Lorne Grabher displays his personalized licence plate in Dartmouth, N.S. The controversy over Lorne Grabhers licence plate, which reads GRABHER, could be settled in court after the Nova Scotia government refused a request from a group of lawyers to allow Grabher to resume using the now-banned plate.Andrew Vaughan The latest installment in the battle between a Nova Scotia man with a contentious personalized licence plate and the Registrar of Motor Vehicles has seen the victim put up a large billboard to raise awareness for his cause. According to The National Post, the controversy began when Lorne Grabher purchased a personalized licence plate for his father in 1991 with his last name on it to express their Austrian-German heritage, when his father died he received the plate back for use on his own vehicle. The Registrar of Motor Vehicles revoked the plate in 2016 for complaints for being a “socially unacceptable slogan, and supports sexual violence against women, which Grabher said violates his constitutional rights. He is now seeking to have the plate reinstated. To help aid in his battle, the Calgary-based Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms has decided to back him up by funding the billboard erected in Northern Halifax, and selling stickers that go toward his cause. Grabher’s hearing will begin on Wednesday in Nova Scotia Supreme Court and is expected to wrap up by
Origin: Nova Scotia man fights to have his ‘offensive’ plate reinstated