As SVT has previously shown, the proportion of cars weighing two tonnes has doubled on Swedish roads since 2010. And now SVT's review shows that many climate cars are large and heavy as well.

The average weight of the climate cars is over 1,800 kg. It is 200 kg more than other cars in Sweden, and 400 kg more than the average car in Europe. And the batteries do not explain the whole weight difference. It is also about the car models being large and powerful. Almost every fifth climate bonus car has more than 250 horsepower, shows SVT's processing of data from the Swedish Transport Agency.

Most popular bonus heavy

There are more and more smaller models coming out, but a review of all cars that have received a climate bonus from the start of the system in 2018 to October 2019 shows that 24 percent, ie every fourth car, which has received a climate bonus, weighs over two tonnes.

The most popular climate bonus car of all 2019, the Mitsubishi Outlander, in most cases weighs over two tons. So does Volvo's big charging hybrids, both the combination models and the SUVs. Tesla and Audi, which are fully powered by electricity, also weigh over two tonnes.

"Always worse for the climate"

Big cars draw more energy and produce more emissions when you drive them, and they require more resources in steel mills and factories as they are manufactured.

"Larger cars are always worse for the climate than smaller cars," says Professor Öivind Andersson at Lund University of Technology.

This is true even if the cars run completely or partially on electricity. Big cars have larger batteries that require more resources when manufactured. In addition, the raw materials for the batteries are in short supply, which means that they are enough for fewer cars if the cars are large.