National Post (National Edition)

China hastens the world toward an electric-car future

Government money propels wide support

- KEITH BRADSHER The New York Times

SHENZHEN, CHINA • There is a powerful reason that automakers worldwide are speeding up their efforts to develop electric vehicles — and that reason is China.

Propelled by vast amounts of government money and visions of dominating next-generation technologi­es, China has become the world’s biggest supporter of electric cars. That is forcing automakers from Detroit to Yokohama and Seoul to Stuttgart to pick up the pace of transforma­tion or risk being left behind in the world’s largest car market.

Beijing has already called for one out of every five cars sold in China to run on alternativ­e fuel by 2025. Last month, China issued new rules that would require the world’s carmakers to sell more alternativ­e-energy cars in that country if they wanted to continue selling regular ones. A Chinese official recently said the country would eventually do away with the internal combustion engine in new cars.

“We are seeing ourselves at a crossroads in the developmen­t of the automobile industry in this country, with a global scale in mind,” said Juergen Stackmann, Volkswagen’s top executive for VW brand sales and marketing, during a visit to Shanghai.

China has reshaped industries before — clothing, steelmakin­g, even lace — through a potent mix of government support and cheap labour. More recently it has transforme­d green-energy businesses like solar and wind power.

This, however, would be on a different scale.

If China succeeds — and there is no guarantee — Beijing’s policymake­rs will be front and centre in reimaginin­g the global auto industry, a business that has helped define communitie­s, industries and people’s aspiration­s for more than a century. It is a role that was almost inconceiva­ble just a few decades ago, when China was more closely associated with a different type of green transporta­tion: the black, classic Flying Pigeon bicycle.

China feels it has little choice in pressing forward. While it is true that electric vehicles fit neatly into China’s plan to become the world leader in sci-fi technology like artificial intelligen­ce, the country also fears a dark future, one where its cities remain cloaked in smog and it is beholden to foreign countries to sell it the oil it needs.

Already, China is the world’s largest maker and seller of electric cars. Chinese buyers are on track to snap up almost 300,000 of them this year, three times the number expected to be sold in the U.S. and more than the rest of the world combined.

The country’s market heft is considerab­le. China buys more General Motors-branded cars than Americans do. Even for Tesla, the still-small American maker of luxury electric sedans, China has become the second-largest market, even though China’s taxes on imported cars are 10 times as high as those in the U.S. Tesla officials have said they are considerin­g opening a factory in China.

A week ago, GM and Ford unveiled plans to add a combined 33 electric models to their lineups. Global manufactur­ers GM and Volkswagen are also moving much of their research, developmen­t and production of electric cars to China. China, in turn, is pressuring them to share that technology with their Chinese partners. Behind the scenes, China recruiting some of the is a lawyer based in Shanghai, who has bought two made by Chery, a Chinese automaker. He said he was delighted that the operating cost was less than one-fifth of the cost of buying gasoline, even if the initial purchase price was a little higher.

“I think the future lies in electric cars,” Xiong said.

Many outside China — including some members of President Donald Trump’s administra­tion — say China is using unfair government support to create national champions that could eclipse their rivals abroad.

Chinese auto executives say their country is pursuing common-sense policies to develop cutting-edge industries.

“In China, the entreprene­urs in the industrial sector are very lucky, because we have the foundation” from the government, said Li Bin, the founder and chairman of the NIO Co., a Chinese electric car manufactur­er. “These opportunit­ies are rare or impossible in any other country in the world.”

China’s auto manufactur­ing skills are considerab­le, but it has yet to create a single car model that has become popular abroad. Even in China, most car buyers still prefer Fords, Chevrolets and Volkswagen­s, largely made by government-mandated joint ventures between global and Chinese companies. When it comes to electric cars, most Chinese models are inexpensiv­e and boxy, unlike the sleek lines and looming falcon-wing doors of Tesla’s latest models.

Chinese officials have long called for electric cars to be practical, not just luxuries.

“The central government has made a lot of strategies for the developmen­t of newenergy vehicles,” said Song Qiuling, a deputy director at China’s Finance Ministry. “That is why we have seen the progress and developmen­t of new-energy vehicles.”

Some players have already stumbled. Faraday Future, an electric car company based in the U.S. but owned by a Chinese company, scaled back after its parent hit hard financial times. China yanked electricca­r subsidies away from a number of local companies after an investigat­ion last year showed that many were overstatin­g sales.

The environmen­tal benefits may be tough to realize any time soon. Nearly three-quarters of China’s power comes from coal, which emits more climatecha­nging gases than oil. Even on electricit­y, China’s cars are still burning dirty.

China is also favouring battery-electric technology that it can call its own. Foreign automakers already control much of the advanced technology behind fuel-sipping alternativ­es such as plug-in hybrids.

Electric cars make particular sense in China. China’s dense and crowded cities often mean shorter driving distances, while its extensive high-speed rail system reduces the need for long-distance road trips.

Han Tao discovered the limits of electric cars the hard way. A 35-year-old stock investor in Beijing, he said he ran out of charge in July while driving to Shenzhen, 1,300 miles away. His Chinese-made BYD E6 electric sedan needed a tow.

Still, he said, he and his wife prefer the E6 over the gasoline-powered Chevrolet Cruze they bought four years earlier.

“It doesn’t have the oily smell and the noise from the engine,” Han said.

“It accelerate­s way faster than gasoline cars. It feels like you are on a high-speed train.”

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