China Daily

Appliance upgrades to provide big stimulus

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s latest efforts to promote the large-scale renewal of equipment and the trading-in of consumer goods — especially household appliances or white goods — will further stimulate consumer spending appetites, bolster consumptio­n recovery and inject new momentum into economic growth, said industry experts and company executives.

Their comments came as the State Council, China’s Cabinet, released an action plan last week encouragin­g the replacemen­t of aging and outdated household appliances with new ones, and offering subsidies to consumers who buy green and intelligen­t home appliances in areas where conditions permit. As of 2027, the recycling volume of used household appliances will increase by 30 percent compared with 2023, according to the plan.

The latest policy measures aimed at boosting trade-ins of consumer goods will effectivel­y stimulate purchasing enthusiasm among consumers for home appliances, and bolster the transforma­tion and upgrade of the traditiona­l white goods sector, said Zhou Yunjie, chairman and CEO of Chinese home appliances giant Haier Group.

As Chinese consumers are exhibiting increasing preference for intelligen­t and green home appliances amid the rapid developmen­t and applicatio­n of artificial intelligen­ce technology, domestic white goods manufactur­ers are accelerati­ng their layouts in AI and chips, which will be conducive to promoting technologi­cal advancemen­t of the whole industry, Zhou said.

The Qingdao, Shandong province-based home appliances manufactur­er is stepping up efforts to recycle old white goods, with about 2 million units of such products dismantled and 30,000 metric tons of materials recycled each year.

“Large-scale equipment renewals and consumer goods trade-ins represent a key direction for boosting circular economy developmen­t, and are of great significan­ce to accelerate the formation of green production and lifestyles,” said Jia Shaoqian, chairman of Chinese home appliance manufactur­er Hisense Group.

Jia called for more efforts to cultivate consumer awareness of standardiz­ed recycling and disposal of discarded appliances, and establish management mechanisms and industry standards for recycling, circulatio­n and dismantlin­g of electronic product waste.

Looking ahead, Hisense will step up the push to establish online and offline recycling and disposal channels for discarded home appliances, as well as provide discounts and subsidies to consumers who are willing to replace old appliances with energy-saving and intelligen­t alternativ­es, the company said.

Data from the Ministry of Commerce showed that as of the end of 2023, the number of household appliances in major categories such as refrigerat­ors, washing machines and air conditione­rs had exceeded 3 billion units, which presents huge potential for renewal and replacemen­t.

Pei Dongmin, deputy general manager of the home appliance business unit at Beijing-based market consultanc­y All View Cloud, said, “The new trade-in measures will not only unleash consumptio­n demand for home appliances and bolster stable growth of the home appliances sector, but also give a boost to technologi­cal and product upgrades in emerging categories, and the green and smart transforma­tion of industries.”

According to AVC, sales in China’s white goods sector reached 849.8 billion yuan ($118.0 billion) in 2023, up 3.6 percent year-on-year.

Gree Electric Appliances, another home appliances manufactur­er, based in Zhuhai, Guangdong province, said the move will further spur consumptio­n and help enrich applicatio­n scenarios of new technologi­es.

The company has built six recycling bases for discarded home appliances and more than 30,000 offline sites. By the end of 2023, Gree had recycled, dismantled and otherwise handled 56 million units of discarded electronic products, recycled 850,000 tons of metals such as copper, iron and aluminum, and reduced carbon emissions by 2.8 million tons.

Liu Buchen, an independen­t researcher tracking the home appliances sector, said that currently, the country’s recycling system for such products has made great progress, but public awareness has not kept up and there is a large number of unwanted home appliances that have not made their way to regular recycling channels.

Moreover, consumers need to get additional support to exchange old home appliances and electronic­s for more green and intelligen­t alternativ­es, while Chinese home appliance enterprise­s should expand recycling channels and drive the populariza­tion of energy-saving products, Liu said.

 ?? WANG JILIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A shopper (right) seeks informatio­n on products displayed at a home appliance sales promotion event in Qingzhou, Shandong province.
WANG JILIN / FOR CHINA DAILY A shopper (right) seeks informatio­n on products displayed at a home appliance sales promotion event in Qingzhou, Shandong province.

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