Bangkok Post

Battle for ‘tech luxury’ in China as EVs get smarter, cheaper

- SARAH WU KEVIN KROLICKI

The

battle for consumer attention in China’s electric car market is being fought over touches of “tech luxury” that car buyers in other markets have never seen.

China’s upstart electric brands, and even its state-owned, legacy automakers, are racing to pack technology and features once considered premium into EVs as cheap as $20,000 — less than half the cost of an average new car in the United States, which is now more than $48,000.

That represents a deepening challenge to foreign brands in China, including Tesla and Volkswagen, which both have top-selling EVs in the world’s largest market, and others, analysts say.

Last year, BYD shocked the automotive industry with the release of its Seagull EV, now priced under $10,000, at the Shanghai auto show. The Seagull is now China’s fourth-best selling EV.

But other Chinese automakers, including state-run companies that were later entrants to the EV race, have closed the gap on sub-$10,000 EVs at the Auto China show that began in Beijing on Thursday.

The market is also crowded with electric and plug-in vehicles starting near $20,000 that still splash out on once-expensive interior features and technology.

Chinese consumers, especially younger ones, rank “technology luxury” as an important considerat­ion, and Chinese automakers are taking the lead on such features, said Raymond Tsang, a Shanghai-based Bain & Co partner.

“This is quite different from many other Western markets where traditiona­lly car buyers are still weighting quite heavily on build quality, reliabilit­y, ride and handling,” he said.

KARAOKE IN A MERCEDES

In a race to stand out, some Chinese brands are offering features intended to be fun, if not frivolous.

The Baojun Yep, a mini-EV by the SAIC-GM-Wuling joint-venture that starts at around $11,000, has a screen on the tailgate where drivers can flash messages such as “thank you,” or a heart emoji, to acknowledg­e the kindness of another driver.

The Zeekr 001 electric sedan, a premium offering in China that starts at around $37,000, has a front grille that can play music at a stop while giving pedestrian­s a bouncing string of thumbs-up emojis.

SAIC Motor brand Roewe’s just-released D5X DMH plug-in hybrid SUV, which starts at around $16,500, allows drivers to enter up to 10 different commands into a navigation system, such as a series of different destinatio­ns, all at once.

XPeng and Nio, EV-focused companies that began as start-ups, are rolling out mass-market brands for China where competitio­n on price has become cut-throat. Xpeng expects its Mona-branded EV to be the first in China priced below $21,000 that comes with high-level self-driving features.

“Even one or two years ago, I didn’t think we could achieve that,” XPeng co-president Brian Gu told reporters on the sidelines of Auto China.

In China, the price of specialise­d components — including sensors needed for self-driving features and screens for on-board entertainm­ent — has tumbled and competitio­n has intensifie­d in the world’s largest auto market, analysts say.

Dongfeng, a state-owned automaker, is showing off the Nammi in Beijing. The EV with a 300-km (186-mile) range sells for $9,600. It features flush door handles that pop out on command, an aerodynami­c feature popularise­d by Tesla. Owners can start the car and open the doors remotely with a smartphone.

‘CHINESE WOW EFFECTS’

Historical­ly US and European brands have been considered more luxurious and higher quality than Chinese brands. That’s changing fast, analysts say.

“The halo of foreign brands has almost disappeare­d,” McKinsey analysts said in an outlook for China’s auto market released in March. “Foreign, high-end traditiona­l car owners are being transforme­d into Chinese highend, new energy brand owners in an almost one-way flow.”

The German automakers are not standing still.

Volkswagen, China’s leading foreign brand, plans to deliver the “Chinese wow effects” that tech-savvy consumers there expect, China chief Ralf Brandstaet­ter told reporters on Tuesday. Mercedes-Benz CEO Ola Kaellenius told Reuters that his Chinese digital tech team was dedicated to catering to the tastes of younger and more tech-oriented consumers in China.

“In the new E-Class, you can sing karaoke. Maybe you don’t have that feature in Germany. Maybe you should. But here customers love it,” he said.

Both German executives said their cars had the capability to add new features with “China speed” through overthe-air software updates.

At Chinese tech giant Huawei’s flagship store in central Beijing earlier this week, Jack Xu was shopping not for a smartphone but for his first EV. The one that caught his eye was a Huawei-backed SUV under the Aito brand, an EV manufactur­ed in partnershi­p with Seres.

“For EVs, we are already leading the world,” the 36-year-old education worker said, looking at the display screen spanning the width of the front row. “Why would I choose a foreign car?”

 ?? ?? The Hongqi Golden Sunflower EV, made by China’s state-owned FAW Group, at Auto China in Beijing yesterday.
The Hongqi Golden Sunflower EV, made by China’s state-owned FAW Group, at Auto China in Beijing yesterday.

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