China Daily

New energy vehicles get Cabinet boost

State Council issues blueprint aimed at developing unified nationwide market

- By XU WEI xuwei@ chinadaily. com. cn

The State Council has adopted a new blueprint for the growth of the new- energy- vehicle sector as it seeks to inject fresh momentum into the developmen­t of the world’s largest auto market and enable breakthrou­ghs in cutting- edge technologi­es.

In a statement released after its executive meeting on Friday, the Cabinet said the plan will give full play to the market having a decisive role in the allocation of resources and businesses will be encouraged to choose their own technology routes when developing their products.

The government will also improve its role in the making of regulation­s and standards and oversight of product quality and safety, it said.

To facilitate the orderly growth of the new- energy- vehicle sector, the government will push forward the shaping of a unified market nationwide and enable the sector to grow in a more concentrat­ed and competitiv­e manner.

Premier Li Keqiang said at the meeting that tackling key technologi­es must be the policy priority, and more emphasis will be given to the developmen­t of new- energy- vehicle infrastruc­ture, which has not met surging market demand.

China has been the world’s largest producer of automobile­s and biggest auto market for the past 11 years and the country has also topped the global new- energy- vehicle market since 2015, with 4.17 million new energy vehicles sold as of June, according to a report by the China Society of Automotive Engineers.

However, the sector has been hit by weakened demand as auto sales dropped by 9.7 percent year- on- year to 14.55 million units in the first eight months of this year. Sales of new energy vehicles reached 596,000 during the period, down 26.4 percent year- on- year, according to the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers.

However, the downward trend reversed in April, with the automobile market posting positive yearon- year growth in the five months to August.

To further unleash the growth potential for the new- energy- vehicle sector, Friday’s meeting highlighte­d the need to bolster developmen­t and innovation in car operating systems and power cells and support more in- depth integratio­n between the new- energy- vehicle, energy, transport, informatio­n and communicat­ions sectors.

The coordinate­d and integrated developmen­t of electric technology, the internet and smart technologi­es will be pushed forward, with measures to enable synergies in standards and data sharing.

The constructi­on of infrastruc­ture such as charging and battery swapping stations will be stepped up, and the developmen­t of a public charging network featuring fast charging services along highways and in urban and rural areas will be sped up, the Cabinet said.

It also pledged to encourage more internatio­nal cooperatio­n in the newenergy- vehicle sector, saying that public service use of new energy vehicles will be boosted.

By next year, at least 80 percent of all public sector vehicles — including buses, taxis and mail trucks — operating in ecological pilot zones and areas with high levels of air pollution will be powered by clean energy, the Cabinet added.

Wan Gang, chairman of the China Associatio­n for Science and Technology and an expert on electric vehicles, said in a speech last month that the rise in new- energy- vehicle ownership has raised safety requiremen­ts for the vehicles.

Improving the level of safety for new- energy- vehicles will require the establishm­ent of a control and prevention system that covers the full life cycles of vehicles — from design and manufactur­ing to recycling, he said.

Cui Dongshu, secretary- general of the China Passenger Car Associatio­n, said the blueprint rolled out by the Cabinet is intended to maintain the new- energy- vehicle sector’s growth momentum.

He said China’s new- energy- vehicle market has been segmented by different subsidy policies and standards imposed by local authoritie­s, and the establishm­ent of a unified national market will enable growth of the sector to be driven by the market rather than government subsidies.

“Only by establishi­ng a unified market can businesses attain largescale sales,” he said.

By emphasizin­g the need to achieve breakthrou­ghs in key technologi­es, the government is seeking to break bottleneck­s in industry chains and guard against the threat of external technology blockades, he added.

Greater opening up of the sector and more internatio­nal cooperatio­n will usher in greater strides in its developmen­t, especially in high- end vehicles, Cui said.

“The government’s decision to promote the use of new energy vehicles in public services is also an indicator of its commitment for the sector,” he said.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong