China Daily

Philippine EVs eye Chinese investment

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com Jiang Xueqing in Tokyo contribute­d to this story.

The Philippine­s’ electric vehicle industry is seeking more Chinese investment­s, with industry executives noting that Chinese automakers have the technology and financing that can help boost the local EV and battery manufactur­ing sector.

“Chinese investment­s are critical for the developmen­t of the EV industry in the Philippine­s,” Rommel Juan, chairman of the Electric Vehicle Associatio­n of the Philippine­s, or EVAP, told China Daily.

He said that as one of the world’s biggest EV markets, China is a global trendsette­r for EVs. The EVAP, which was set up in 2009, includes Chinese car companies’ branches in the Philippine­s, and “they’re really the ones who are making the (local EV) industry grow”.

Juan said the EVAP had also linked up with local battery manufactur­ers and nickel miners to boost the country’s battery manufactur­ing industry. The Philippine­s is one of the world’s biggest producers of nickel, a key material for making batteries.

“Since we have the raw materials, (battery manufactur­ing is) an investment that the Chinese companies can look into,” he said.

But while some of China’s biggest EV makers such as Dongfeng Motor and Chery Group have branched out in the Philippine­s, these companies are only focused on distributo­rship, said Jose Bienvenido Biona, associate professor and director of the Center for Engineerin­g and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Research at the Manilabase­d De La Salle University.

Decarboniz­ation move

The move toward decarboniz­ation has spurred the growth of the global EV industry.

The Philippine government has laid out a road map that aims to increase EV adoption in the domestic market and encourage more investment­s in EV manufactur­ing.

But while the Philippine­s has been producing and assembling electric tricycles for more than a decade, most locally manufactur­ed four-wheelers are electric jeepneys as they are used for public transport. There are fewer than 9,000 EVs out of the nearly 13 million cars registered in the Philippine­s in 2021, according to the latest data.

“The ease of doing business in the Philippine­s is a lot harder,” Ferdinand Raquelsant­os, the EVAP’s honorary chairman, told China Daily.

EVAP president Edmund Araga said while the Philippine­s has a lot of skilled workers to offer potential investors in EV manufactur­ing, it cannot compete with other Southeast Asian countries when it comes to lower material costs, logistics and infrastruc­ture.

Compared with its peers in Southeast Asia, the Philippine­s has fallen behind Thailand and Indonesia in attracting investors in EV manufactur­ing. For example, the Shenzhen-based BYD, the world’s top EV manufactur­er, has set up a factory in Thailand. In the second half of this year, the company will start production with a focus on the Thai market for sales, according to Liu Xueliang, general manager of BYD Asia-Pacific Auto Sales Division.

BYD also plans to invest $1.3 billion to build a manufactur­ing plant in Indonesia, Indonesia’s Coordinati­ng Minister for Economic Affairs, Airlangga Hartarto, told local media in January.

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