Aston Martin boss distances himself from questionable EV report

Aston Martin Lagonda Global Holdings Plc is reviewing how a report was commissioned that researchers criticized for making inaccurate comparisons of the climate harm caused by cars powered by batteries and combustion engines.

Tobias Moers, Aston Martin’s chief executive officer, said the report the carmaker compiled along with some of its peers predated him joining the company in August. One claim it made that was widely reported by U.K. media outlets in the wake of Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s 2030 ban on vehicles lacking a plug was that it takes 78,000 kilometers (48,000 miles) for EVs to be cleaner than conventional cars.

Tobias Moers speaks at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit in this Jan. 9, 2017, file photo.

The figure is more like 16,000 miles, according to Auke Hoekstra, a researcher at the Eindhoven University of Technology. He said the report underestimated emissions from combustion-engine cars by roughly half and didn’t take into account fuel production. It also bases its approximation of the carbon footprint of EVs on one model built by Polestar, the carmaker jointly owned by Sweden’s Volvo Cars and China’s Geely Holding Group.