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Businesses Accelerate EV and Battery Finance Amid Fuel Volatility

Why rising diesel costs are changing the maths for Australian fleets

Businesses Accelerate EV and Battery Finance Amid Fuel Volatility?w=400

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Australian businesses are increasingly treating electrification as a cost-control strategy, not just an environmental decision.
Recent reporting on bank lending data shows a sharp rise in finance for green equipment, with NAB saying its green equipment loan uptake between March and May 2026 was almost double the level recorded over the same period last year.

The key driver is fuel volatility. As diesel and petrol prices remain exposed to global supply shocks, many operators are looking for ways to reduce their reliance on imported fuels. For some businesses, that means financing electric vehicles for staff or delivery fleets. For others, it means pairing EVs with solar, batteries or electric machinery to reduce ongoing operating costs.

Importantly for EV Loan Hub readers, the story highlights a shift in how borrowers may assess an EV finance options. The cheapest vehicle on the day is not always the lowest-cost option over the life of ownership. A business weighing up a diesel van against an electric alternative may need to compare fuel savings, servicing costs, charging setup, depreciation, tax treatment and interest costs before deciding what is genuinely affordable.

The construction and manufacturing examples are especially relevant for small and medium businesses. Battery-powered cranes, rooftop solar and EV fleets are no longer fringe ideas for large corporates only. They are becoming practical tools for reducing exposure to fuel bills, particularly where vehicles return to a depot and can be charged on-site. That can make repayment planning more predictable, although the upfront purchase price and infrastructure costs still need careful attention.

For households and sole traders, the lesson is similar: do not assess an EV loan in isolation from running costs. A lower interest rate is valuable, but so is a realistic view of charging access, weekly kilometres, insurance, servicing and resale value. Before committing, buyers should model repayments across several loan terms and stress-test the result against their monthly budget.

This development also extends the recent trend of fuel price pressure pushing more Australians towards EVs. The fresh angle is that business borrowers are now acting at scale, and lenders are responding with products designed for cleaner vehicles and equipment. That could increase competition in green lending over time, but borrowers should still check fees, eligibility rules, balloon payments and early payout conditions.

For anyone considering a new or used EV, the takeaway is clear: compare the total cost, not just the sticker price. Finance can help bring forward the switch, but the best outcome comes from matching the loan, vehicle and charging setup to real-world usage.

Published:Sunday, 21st Jun 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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