Global sales of fully electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles rose 35 per cent in October from the same month last year, led by a 54 per cent jump in sales in China, market research firm Rho Motion said on Wednesday, reports Reuters.
European sales rose just 0.8 per cent, but were up in annual terms for the second straight month and the research firm expects a good end to the year in the region, data manager Charles Lester told Reuters.
The European auto sector is facing challenges including high production costs, managing the shift to EVs, and an influx of lower-cost vehicles from Chinese rivals.
Europe's biggest carmaker Volkswagen said in October it planned to shut at least three factories in Germany.
Sales of EVs - whether fully electric or plug-in hybrids - reached 1.72 million worldwide in October, Rho Motion data showed.
Sales in China hit a record high 1.2 million vehicles.
In the United States and Canada, EV sales were up 11.4 per cent to 0.16 million, while in Europe, they reached 0.26 million, up slightly on the year but down 14 per cent from September.
In the rest of the world, sales increased 10.9 per cent.
Global sales of fully electric and plugged-in hybrid passenger cars crossed 1.5 million for second consecutive month in October with China accounting for 70 per cent share.Sales in Europe fell compared to previous month
"The Chinese EV market shows no signs of slowing down as it enters the final two strong automotive sales months of the year," Rho Motion said in a statement.
Lester said November and December tend to be seasonally strong months.
Carbon emission reduction goals set in the EU for next year could lead to price cuts as automakers look to boost EV sales to meet targets and avoid fines, he said.
China's passenger vehicle sales jumped 11.2 per cent in October year-on-year, data from China Passenger Car Association showed last week, led by domestic EV champion BYD.