China Daily (Hong Kong)

New rules set to govern low-speed electric vehicles and tackle questions of safety

- HAO YAN haoyan@chinadaily.com.cn

The Chinese government is set to plug the existing regulator y gap to update national standards for low-speed electric vehicles in a move to improve both driver and pedestrian safe ty and air quality.

Under the existing regulatory framework, there are no rules governing the production and sale of electric vehicles with top speeds of less than 100 kilometers per hour.

This has resulted in a large number of cheap, poorly made electric vehicles powered by polluting lead batteries, which threaten both road safety and the environmen­t, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology said in a statement on its website.

Ma ny i n d u s t r i a l e x p e r t s have predicted that a number of manufactur­ers currently producing such low-speed vehicles could be faced with closure, as their plants and produc ts may fall shor t of future requiremen­ts.

Chen Shiquan, council member of the Socie ty of Automotive Engineers of China, said that the country is determined to regulate the small, low-speed electric vehicle sector.

The local government in Dezhou city, Shandong province, has already begun scrapping those lower quality vehicles that are unlikely to meet the new standards.

These lower quality vehicles are typically based on a welded steel frame with a stamped steel body on top, and they combine car design practices from the 1930s with modern manufactur­ing processes. As a result, they are the cheapest electric vehicles in the world.

T hey are typically small, and can be as narrow as 1.1 meters.

Taihu city in Anhui province took similar action recently.

Wang Binggang, an expert working on the Ministry of Science and Technology’s new energy vehicle research project, said: “The new standards will emphasize the safety of pedestrian­s, of the driver and passengers in the lowspeed electric vehicles, and also the safety of other road users. One of the measures to help improve safety would be the enforcemen­t of a speed restrictio­n on such vehicles.”

Low-speed electric vehicles are currently categorize­d as farm vehicles for legal pur- poses, and may be used in suburban areas up to speeds of 70 km/h. They can, however, be manually customized to run at speeds of up to 100 km/h, and usually those who drive such vehicles are not required to hold driving licenses.

“Un l i c e n s e d d r i v e r s i n a w h o l e h o s t o f d i ff e r e n t vehicles, none of which are insured, are something we simply will not allow,” Dong Yang , head of the working group drafting the new standards, wrote in an opinion piece on his public WeChat account.

T hese tiny vehicles that r e s e m b l e g o l f c a r t s h av e become an ever-more common sight on Chinese roads, especially in lower-tier cities, where they are replacing motorcycle­s due to their low cost and flexibilit­y.

The cheapest low-speed electric vehicles sell for just $2,000.

“They are affordable. Consumers need these cheaper models in small towns, because public transporta­tion systems there are underdevel­oped,” an executive of a low-speed electric vehicle manufactur­er said.

Along with the cost advantages, users of low-speed electric cars can also recharge them through home power outlets, instead of charging poles.

According to local media reports, 1 million low-speed electric vehicles are produced every year, and roughly 4 million are currently running on China’s roads.

The reports also said that more than 618,000 low-speed electric vehicles were delivered in Shandong province in 2016, marking growth of 47.8 percent on the previous year.

Opinions differ as to whether or not such vehicles should be governed by the same laws as passenger cars, Dong noted in his opinion piece.

China’s transporta­tion management bodies welcome such proposals, as it would ensure higher safety standards.

Passenger cars in China are regulated and managed by a series of national standards that cover safety, production and testing.

 ?? LI MING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A dealer waits to sell a used car at a trade center in Zaozhuang, Shandong province.
LI MING / FOR CHINA DAILY A dealer waits to sell a used car at a trade center in Zaozhuang, Shandong province.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A worker checks a low-speed electric vehicle at a production line in Chuzhou, Anhui province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A worker checks a low-speed electric vehicle at a production line in Chuzhou, Anhui province.

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