The National - News

Electric car sales in China outpace other countries

- THE NATIONAL

Adoption of electric vehicles in China is outpacing other countries, driven by very strong domestic policy support, according to Bloomberg.

EVs reached almost 4 per cent of passenger vehicle sales in China in the second quarter, up from under 1 per cent just three years ago. EVs represente­d around 2.2 per cent of sales in Europe and 1.6 per cent in North America.

This rapid growth looks set to continue. Fourth-quarter EV sales are usually strong and beginning in 2019, car makers will have to sell a set percentage of “new-energy vehicles” as part of a quota system, similar to the mandate already in place in California, Bloomberg said.

Car makers that fail to reach the targets will be forced to buy credits from competitor­s. China had 47 per cent of the global electric car market in 2017, and this is expected to rise to 55 per cent for 2018.

The news comes as Japan’s Nissan Motor plans to invest about $900 million to boost vehicle-making capacity in China by 40 per cent by 2021 – part of an approximat­ely $8.73bn strategy to become a top three player in the world’s largest car market. Nissan and its Chinese joint-venture partner Dongfeng intend to invest around $900 million for the envisioned manufactur­ing capacity expansion over the next few years, according to a person familiar with the plan. That would boost Nissan’s vehicle production capacity in China to as many as 2.1 million vehicles a year.

Nissan, part of the Renault-Nissan alliance, plans to use the added capacity to produce both EVs and gasoline-fuelled cars for the Nissan brand and its China-only Venucia brand.

Rival Toyota plans to boost its China capacity over the next few years by 240,000 vehicles a year, or by about 20 per cent, from its current capacity of 1.16 million vehicles a year.

Japan’s Nissan Motor plans to invest about $900m to boost vehicle making capacity in China by 40% by 2020

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