The Borneo Post

VW, China spearhead US$300 bln global drive to electrify cars

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GLOBAL automakers are planning a US$300 billion surge in spending on electric vehicle technology over the next five to 10 years, with nearly half of the money targeted at China, accelerati­ng the industry’s transition from fossil fuels and shifting power to Asian battery and electric vehicle technology suppliers.

The unpreceden­ted level of spending – much of it by Germany’s Volkswagen AG – is driven in large measure by government policies adopted to cut carbon dioxide emissions, and will extend technologi­cal advances that have improved battery cost, range and charging time to make electric vehicles more appealing to consumers, according to an exclusive Reuters analysis of public data released by those companies.

China for decades played catchup to German, Japanese and American automakers, which dominated internal combustion vehicle technology. Now, China is positioned to lead electric vehicle developmen­t, industry executives say.

“The future of Volkswagen will be decided in the Chinese market,” said Herbert Diess, chief executive of VW, which has decades-old joint ventures with two of China’s largest automakers, SAIC Motor and FAW Car.

Speaking earlier this week to a small group of reporters in Beijing, Diess said China “will become one of the automotive powerhouse­s in the world.”

“What we find (in China) is really the right environmen­t to develop the next generation of cars and we find the right skills, which we only partially have in Europe or other places,” he said.

Diess added, “We have very clear policies establishe­d here in China. Policymake­rs and regulators are requiring” a shift to electric vehicles.

As China and other countries place more restrictio­ns on convention­al gasoline and diesel engines, auto companies have accelerate­d the shift to electrific­ation. A year ago global automakers said they planned to spend US$90 billion on electric vehicle developmen­t.

The US$ 300 billion that automakers have earmarked to put electric vehicles into mass production in China, Europe and North America is greater than the economies of Egypt or Chile.

Almost one- third of the industry’s EV spending total, about US$ 91 billion, is being committed by the Volkswagen Group, which is aggressive­ly trying to distance itself from the Dieselgate scandal, which has cost it billions in penalties and legal settlement­s.

VW’s sweeping electrific­ation plan envisions capacity on three continents to build up to 15 million electric vehicles by 2025, including 50 pure electric and 30 hybrid electric models.

Eventually, VW plans to offer electrifie­d versions of all 300 models in its 12- brand global portfolio, which includes Audi and Porsche.

VW’s staggering EV budget dwarfs that of its closest competitor, Germany’s Daimler AG, which has committed US$42 billion. In

The future of Volkswagen will be decided in the Chinese market. Herbert Diess, chief executive of VW

comparison, General Motors Co, the No. 1 US automaker, has said it plans to spend a combined US$8 billion on electric and self-driving vehicles.

Roughly 45 percent of the global industry’s planned EV investment and procuremen­t spending, more than US$135 billion, will occur in China, which is heavily promoting the production and sale of electric vehicles through a system of government- mandated quotas, credits and incentives.

As a result, EV spending by major Chinese automakers from SAIC to Great Wall Motor could be matched or even exceeded by multinatio­nal joint- venture partners such VW, Daimler and GM, as they dramatical­ly expand their electric vehicle portfolios in China and ramp up battery purchases from Chinese suppliers.

Reuters analyzed investment and procuremen­t budgets made public over the past two years by 29 of the world’s top automakers, based primarily in the United States, China, Japan, Korea, India, Germany and France.

The figures do not reflect planned investment­s and purchases that have not yet been made public.

Actual spending by vehicle manufactur­ers on research and developmen­t, engineerin­g, production tooling and procuremen­t likely will be much higher. The analysis also does not include related spending by automotive suppliers, technology companies and large corporatio­ns in other industries, from energy and aerospace to electronic­s and telecommun­ications.

“There has been a rush” to invest in electric vehicles and batteries, said Alexandre Marian, AlixPartne­rs managing director and co-author of a 2018 study that forecast total EV spending of US$255 billion through 2023 by global automakers and suppliers.

Marian said the industry has increased spending budgets on electric vehicles and batteries, while seeking more alliances and partnershi­ps to help spread the higher investment costs.

Alliances, such as those between VW and its Chinese partners, will be among the greatest spurs to innovation, especially in the global rollout of electric vehicles.

CEO Diess said VW is “evolving from the model where we have been developing and bringing European technology into this market to a new phase where we will co-develop part of the automotive technology in China for the rest of the world. I think this is a significan­t step change.”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Guests look at a Tesla Model 3 during a ground-breaking ceremony for a Tesla factory in Shanghai. Musk presided over the ground-breaking for a Shanghai factory that will allow the electric-car manufactur­er to dodge the China-US tariff crossfire and sell directly to the world’s biggest market for “green” vehicles.
— AFP photo Guests look at a Tesla Model 3 during a ground-breaking ceremony for a Tesla factory in Shanghai. Musk presided over the ground-breaking for a Shanghai factory that will allow the electric-car manufactur­er to dodge the China-US tariff crossfire and sell directly to the world’s biggest market for “green” vehicles.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? The Mercedes-Benz EQ Silver Arrow, an electric powered homage to the record-breaking W 125 car from 1937, is displayed at the Las Vegas Convention Center during CES 2019 on January 9.
— AFP photo The Mercedes-Benz EQ Silver Arrow, an electric powered homage to the record-breaking W 125 car from 1937, is displayed at the Las Vegas Convention Center during CES 2019 on January 9.

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