4.6 Article

Consumer perceptions of hybrid electric vehicle adoption and the green automotive market: the Malaysian evidence

Journal

ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 1827-1851

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10668-021-01510-0

Keywords

Green vehicles adoption; Hybrid electric vehicles; HEVs; PHEVs; Online content analysis; Emerging markets

Funding

  1. Research Management Centre, Universiti Teknologi MARA Lestari grant [600-IRMI 5/3/LESTARI 001/2019]

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Compared to many developing countries, Malaysia has struggled to get its citizens to adopt hybrid electric vehicles, with consumers prioritizing value proposition and risk aversion over environmental concerns. The study suggests that a strategic framework and political resolution from ASEAN governments are needed to promote fair competition and incentives in order to dispel negative perceptions and increase the adoption of HEVs in the region.
Compared to many developing countries, Malaysia has been far less successful in getting its citizen to embrace hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs). The study investigates the reasons behind this problem and offers a framework that could facilitate policymakers and stakeholders toward the electrification transition. Using the textual-based content analysis method, text-based articles and comments were extracted from a local reputable automotive news portal using a web scraper tool and analyzed using the open-coding technique. Surprisingly, environmental and greenhouse pollution issues did not emerge from our analysis-indicating that altruistic values and ecological consideration are not among the consumers' priorities when evaluating HEVs. Value proposition and risk aversion form the main themes, while national carmakers, competition, ambiguous policies, perceived unfairness in incentives distribution, and physical presentation constitute the minor themes. Overall, the consumers remain highly cautious and skeptical toward HEVs ownership proposition. This paper contributes to the existing literature by presenting a strategic framework for consumers' adoption of HEVs across Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). The main message is that HEV adoption requires a firm political resolution from ASEAN governments to promote a fairer playing field within the region by complementing (rather than competing with) each other. By removing non-tariff barriers and providing incentives, the gradual growth of a sizeable and sustainable HEV customer base will potentially dispel existing consumers' negative perceptions toward these cars.

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