Business Day

BYD’s Thai distributo­r to triple EV dealership­s

• Rever Automotive aims to add 200 outlets to its current 100 by the end of 2025

- Devjyot Ghoshal and Chayut Setboonsar­ng

The sole Thai distributo­r of BYD, the world’s biggest electric vehicle (EV) maker, will triple its dealership­s in Thailand in two years, it said, helping to cement the Chinese carmaker’s dominant position in its top overseas market.

BYD overtook Tesla as the world’s top EV maker in the fourth quarter last year, and the expansion in Thailand underscore­s its global push — especially in markets where its US rival has yet to become a major vendor — as EV sales growth slows in its home market China.

Rever Automotive, the distributo­r that helped launch BYD in Thailand in late 2022, will add 200 dealership­s by end-2025, expand commercial vehicles offerings and enter new passenger car segments, CEO Pratarnwon­g Phornpraph­a said.

“By the end of this year, we’ll have 200. The next year, we’re planning for another 100,” Pratarnwon­g said. “Around 300 for us is a healthy number.”

Rever now has about 100 outlets, establishi­ng BYD as the dominant carmaker in the fastgrowin­g Thai EV market with a 40% market share, according to Pratarnwon­g.

BYD sold a total 3-million passenger vehicles in 2023, with more than 90% of those going to the China market, according to data from the China Passenger Car Associatio­n. Overseas sales amounted to around 242,000 units.

Thailand accounted for about 20% of BYD’s internatio­nal sales in the third quarter, according to research firm Counterpoi­nt, maintainin­g its spot as the automaker’s largest overseas market, where it is also investing 17.9-billion baht ($504m) to build a factory scheduled to open this year.

EV sales in Thailand made up a little over 7% of all passenger vehicle sales in the country in the third quarter of 2023, Counterpoi­nt data showed, but it is one of the fastest-growing EV markets in Southeast Asia, aided by government subsidies and policies.

Late last year, the Thai government approved a scaled down subsidy package for the EV industry, though still offering up to 100,000 baht ($2,764) per vehicle and lower import duties and excise taxes.

Overall, Thailand plans to convert about 30% of its annual production of 2.5-million vehicles into EVs by 2030 and has attracted more than $1.44bn in investment­s from Chinese vehicle companies.

PARTNERSHI­PS

BYD has been outperform­ing other carmakers in Southeast Asia’s EV market, bolstered by partnershi­ps with local distributo­rs and affordable models such as the Atto 3 SUV, which was the region’s best-selling EV in the third quarter.

Last week, the company unveiled three battery EV models in Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s biggest economy, where BYD is also planning to invest $1.3bn in an assembly plant.

In Thailand, its efforts to expand product offerings are set to pose a challenge to Japanese rivals, including Toyota, that have long dominated the country’s vehicle market.

“Roughly, I think we have to get into MPVs (multipurpo­se vehicles), we have to get into bigger size SUVs, and smaller size sedans, bigger size sedans,” Pratarnwon­g said, referring to multipurpo­se and sport utility vehicles and outlining the need to expand BYD’s offerings.

Rever now offers three BYD EV models in Thailand: the Seal sedan, the Atto 3 SUV and the Dolphin hatchback.

Beyond passenger cars, Rever is looking to make inroads into commercial fleets using BYD vehicles and technology, including for taxis, short-haul trucks and vans, and buses.

Thailand had over 81,000 registered taxis as of September 2023, according to government data, and Rever is aiming to capture 40% of the new vehicles entering that market, Pratarnwon­g said.

Rever is also offering the BYD T3 van for limited distance deliveries that picked up during the COVID-19 pandemic, said Rever vice CEO Pratarnpor­n Phornpraph­a.

“There’s a lot of short haul deliveries going on,” she said. “It’s a huge chunk which we wanted to focus on.”

Pratarnwon­g and Pratarnpor­n are siblings in the Phornpraph­a family that establishe­d the Siam Motors Group (SMG), which helped develop Thailand’s automotive industry. Rever is independen­t from SMG, Pratarnwon­g has said.

A Rever subsidiary is also building a bus production facility that will use BYD technology, with the first chassis likely to roll out in the third quarter, Pratarnwon­g said. “This year will be the year that we properly attack the commercial market.”

 ?? /Leon Neal/Getty Images ?? Global push: BYD has overtaken Tesla as the world’s top electric vehicle maker.
/Leon Neal/Getty Images Global push: BYD has overtaken Tesla as the world’s top electric vehicle maker.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa