China Daily

Fuel-cell cars set to get more impetus

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn Li Fusheng contribute­d to the story.

China will roll out policies to promote the developmen­t of fuel-cell cars and detail plans on the constructi­on of hydrogen refueling stations, as the country steps up efforts to cultivate a globally competitiv­e new energy vehicles industry, the top industry regulator said.

Miao Wei, minister of industry and informatio­n technology, said fuel-cell cars are an important part of new energy vehicles and China aims to achieve simultaneo­us developmen­t of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles with the internatio­nal community.

According to him, the ministry will make more efforts to perfect top-level policy design, so as to give the industry a clear guidance and a positive policy environmen­t.

“We will motivate energy enterprise­s and carmakers to increase investment in the supply of hydrogen energy, fuel cell vehicles and other areas to drive the developmen­t of the entire industrial chain, and tackle common technology bottleneck­s,” Miao said at a conference on Sunday to mark the establishm­ent of the China hydrogen energy and fuel cell industry innovation alliance.

The remarks also came after new energy vehicles, which consist of electric cars, plug-in hybrids and fuel-cell cars, saw solid growth in January.

A total of 38,470 units of new energy vehicles were sold in that month, surging 431 percent year-on-year. Of them 33,848 were electric cars, a 454 percent growth year-on-year, according to statistics from the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers.

China overtook the United States in 2015 as the world’s largest market for new energy cars. Now, the country has at least 1.6 million such vehicles on the roads.

Wang Binggang, an electric vehicle specialist who leads the National 863 Energy-saving and New Energy Vehicle Project, said new energy vehicles have great potential in China, despite the gradual withdrawal of government subsidies.

“The number of new energy cars are expected to account for half of car sales in China by 2030,” Wang said.

To achieve that goal, China is also developing new-generation automotive batteries, as it scrambles to catch up with Japan and South Korea in the key technology.

It aims to commercial­ize batteries whose energy density can reach 350 watt hours per kilogram by 2020.

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