AVERAGE AGE OF UK PARC CONTINUES TO INCREASE

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BRITAIN’s car parc is older than ever before despite the efforts of policymakers, vehicle manufacturers and environmentalists to get motorists behind the wheel of new models and zero-emissions vehicles, according to official figures.

The data, from the DVLA and Department for Transport, has been gathered by website Retro Motor.

It shows that in 2019 there were 6.086 million cars over 13 years old in the UK, approximately one-in-five of all vehicles on the road. 25 years earlier, in 1994, there were only 1.329 million cars of a similar age.

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In 1994, the percentage of cars over 13 years old sat at 6.3 per cent, or just over one in 20 cars. In 2019, that number sat at 19.1%, or just under one in five, despite scrappage schemes and market-led incentives to get people into newer and more environmentally friendly cars.

Cars are getting older, despite what Westminster demands

Meanwhile, the average age of all cars on UK roads has increased from 6.7 years in 1994 to 8.3 years in 2019. There were 21.1 million cars licensed in 1994, rising to 31.8 million in 2019.

But despite the growth in numbers of older vehicles, the news doesn’t necessarily mean that cars are less environmentally friendly as the mileages covered by newer vehicles tend to be higher.

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Retro Motor founder Richard Aucock said: “You have to remember that a 13-year old car in 1994 was an early 1980s model with extremely high emissions and no catalytic converters, whereas cars from the mid-2000s were already starting to meet new Euro emissions legislation.

“In addition, there’s been a huge boom in the popularity of modern classics in recent years, which means that models from the Eighties and Nineties in particular have developed into collectors’ items. Throw into the mix the much-improved build quality of cars from this era and it’s easy to see why many of them remain loved and cherished by enthusiasts, rather than just be used as old bangers.”

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