Almost 20 auto brands missed CO2 targets in Australian Government’s first NVES results

Share


The Australian Government has released the first results under its New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES), and around two-thirds of brands beat their emissions targets.

It has confirmed the average emissions for new light passenger vehicles beat the NVES target by 21 per cent.

Type 1 vehicles (passenger cars and SUVs) had a headline limit of 141g/km of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions for 2025, with Type 2 vehicles – including utes, vans, and large off-road SUVs like the Ford Everest – having a headline limit of 210g/km.

CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.

Overall, Type 1 vehicles had average emissions of 114g/km, while Type 2 vehicles had average emissions of 199g/km.

Headline CO2 limits for Type 1 and Type 2 vehicles will shrink each year until 2029, so car brands that met their target in 2025 mightn’t be so lucky in 2026 unless they continue to introduce low- or zero-emissions vehicles to offset their other vehicles.

A total of 40 ‘regulated entities’ – car manufacturers, suppliers or importers – beat their 2025 CO2 target, and 19 didn’t.

The latter includes Alfa Romeo, Aston Martin, Ferrari, General Motors, Honda, Hyundai, KGM, JLR, Mahindra, Maserati, Mazda, Nissan, Porsche, Rolls-Royce, SAIC Maxus (better known as LDV), and Subaru.