China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Phasing out subsidies puts green cars on right track

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THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT has said it will cut subsidies to newenergy vehicles by 20 percent this year from 2016 levels, and urged local government­s not to offer subsidies that exceed 50 percent of those provided by the central government. Changjiang Daily commented onWednesda­y:

The authoritie­s started subsidizin­g newenergy automakers eight years ago to expand the production and sales of electric cars, plug-in hybrids, and fuel-cell cars. The total amount of subsidies that have been provided reached 33.4 billion yuan ($4.81 billion) by the end of 2015. As a result, the country has become the world’s largest market for newenergy vehicles.

For sustainabl­e growth of the industry, government support was necessary in the initial stages, but the manufactur­ers of newenergy vehicles must now focus on innovation and quality. Thus it is right for the government to raise the threshold for newenergy automakers to receive subsidies, which are set to be phased out by the end of 2020.

Providing auto companies with generous subsidies at the expense of taxpayers will likely make them less motivated to provide quality products, and in some cases it has led to cheating. Seven newenergy vehicle makers have been found to have falsely claimed subsidies for electric cars that were either unfinished or installed with sub-par battery cells. Without doubt, they will be barred from an official catalogue of recommende­d vehicle types that qualify for subsidies.

The fact is, the seemingly booming newenergy vehicle market has failed to bring about any major technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs. The quality and overall performanc­e of Chinese newenergy cars have not notably improved either.

Arevampof the industry’s subsidy policy is therefore timely. But perhaps the authoritie­s could drawsome inspiratio­n from the burgeoning car-hailing market, where competitio­n is basically kept at satisfacto­ry levels. Service apps subsidized both passengers and drivers in the very beginning, mainly to nurture the market in the early stages. They then cut the subsidies and let the market take over.

This approach could also work out in the newenergy car market. Lessening restrictio­ns on purchasing electric cars in big cities should be worth a try.

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