Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chinese engineer credited as visionary of electric-car industry

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At this year’s Beijing Auto Show, a retired Chinese bureaucrat ran his hands over the hood of a sleek sports coupe billed as the world’s fastest battery-powered car and smiled like a proud father.

In a way, that’s exactly what he was. Two decades earlier, Wan Gang had persuaded China’s State Council to throw its vast power behind the risky, unproven technology of electric cars. He advocated using government money, including subsidies, to help create a world-champion industry that would surpass Western automakers.

That coupe he was admiring at the April auto show, it was built by homegrown NIO Inc.

Elon Musk made a name for himself promoting newenergy vehicles, but when the history of the electric car is finally written, Wan may loom larger. Chinese drivers buy one of every two electric vehicles sold, and the global auto industry is pivoting to adjust. It’s a revolution fomented by Wan, a former minister of science and technology whose achievemen­ts are even more extraordin­ary because he never joined the Chinese Communist Party.

“He’s the father of China’s

electric-vehicle industry,” said Levi Tillemann, a former U.S. Department of Energy adviser and author of The Great Race: The Global Quest for the Car of the Future. “Without Wan Gang, it’s unlikely China would have pushed to surpass the West. That was his big idea.”

Wan, 66, who stepped down in March and now holds an academic post at a Beijing think tank, is not currently giving interviews, his office said.

After decades of hype and false starts, electric vehicles are on course to represent a significan­t segment of the auto industry. This year, China’s production of neighborho­od electric vehicles — small vehicles that have a top speed of about 25 miles per hour and a maximum weight of 3,000 pounds — is expected to reach 1 million vehicles — a 26 percent increase from last year. The U.K., France and India are proposing bans on vehicles powered by internal-combustion engines, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

Long before becoming the nation’s top futurist, Wan suffered through the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s, China’s great leap backward for science and technology. Sent from Shanghai to a remote

village near North Korea at age 16 to learn values from peasants, he spent his days repairing the town’s smokebelch­ing tractor and building its electricit­y grid from scratch, according to the state-run People’s Daily and author Lisa Margonelli, who interviewe­d Wan.

One of the lucky few of his generation to attend college, Wan was admitted to a doctoral program in mechanical engineerin­g at Clausthal University of Technology in Germany. When he graduated in 1991, job offers came from all the big German carmakers, but he picked Audi because it was the smallest and provided the best chances for promotion.

As an executive in Audi’s planning department, Wan played the role of ambassador, showing its state-ofthe-art factory in Ingolstadt to Chinese delegates trying to resurrect their decrepit auto industry. One guest was then-science minister Zhu Lilan, who took a liking to the engineer.

Months after their first meeting, in 2000, Wan was back home selling Zhu and the rest of the State Council on the idea of leapfroggi­ng. China was choking in smog, and its automakers, Wan reasoned, could never hope to catch up with Japa- nese, American or German manufactur­ers when it came to traditiona­l vehicles.

A bet on new technologi­es could put China on more-equal footing or even allow it to take the lead, he theorized. It also could help the country break its dependence on foreign oil.

“Wan Gang was saying, ‘I want to create a system where we can be energy secure and there’s a more level playing field for our companies,”’ said Bill Russo, a former Chrysler executive who now heads auto consultant Gao Feng Advisory in Beijing. “He knew you couldn’t win playing the old game.”

And so did some highpowere­d colleagues. Former Vice Premier Li Lanqing, who started in 1952 at the automaker now known as China FAW Group Corp., developed the plan to create the NEV research program. And Ma Kai spearheade­d neighborho­od electric vehicle stimulus policies while running the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission that helps oversee the economy.

By 2007 Wan was minister of science and technology with sway to help funnel research-and-developmen­t money toward favored industries. In that job he repeatedly challenged China’s engineers: Build a fleet of electric buses for the 2008 Beijing Olympics; put 1,000 battery-powered vehicles on the streets of every major city. The spring of 2010 brought subsidies of as much as $10,000 for every electric vehicle the carmakers could sell.

Today there are more than 100 Chinese-made electricca­r models on the market, built by giants such as Warren Buffett-backed BYD Co. and startups such as NIO, which raised about $1 billion in an initial public offering this month.

Wang Chuanfu, the billionair­e founder of BYD, China’s biggest maker of neighborho­od electric vehicles, recalled meeting Wan in 2014. “I was impressed by Wan’s obsession with cleanenerg­y technology,” he said.

Neighborho­od electric vehicles account for about 1 of every 20 passenger cars purchased in China, numbers likely to rise because of state incentives — Wan’s true legacy.

The government is building a vast network of charging stations and strong-arming consumers into buying electric vehicles by making them the only sure way to get a license plate in big cities. Starting next year, every automaker wanting to operate in China has to meet production targets for battery-powered vehicles or buy credits from rivals.

For Jeff Chamberlai­n, these are beneficial changes. Since 2016, the American scientist has run Volta Energy Technologi­es, a battery start-up in Naperville, Ill. He said the revolution wrought by Wan means it no longer matters if the U.S. rolls back emissions or fuel-efficiency standards, as President Donald Trump talks about.

“Whether it’s Ford or General Motors or VW, or Hyundai or Toyota, if they want to participat­e in the Chinese market they must have electric vehicles,” Chamberlai­n said.

“I’m happy for Wan Gang because that was his vision from many years ago.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jason Clenfield, Ying Tian, Elisabeth Behrmann, David Welch, Jie Ma, Yan Zhang, Lee Miller, Brent O’Brien and Kevin Dharmawan of Bloomberg News.

Neighborho­od electric vehicles account for about 1 of every 20 passenger cars purchased in China, numbers likely to rise because of state incentives — Wan’s true legacy.

 ?? Bloomberg/QILAI SHEN ?? Customers look inside a NIO Inc. ES8 sport utility vehicle on display earlier this month at the Nio House showroom at the Shanghai Tower in Shanghai, China.
Bloomberg/QILAI SHEN Customers look inside a NIO Inc. ES8 sport utility vehicle on display earlier this month at the Nio House showroom at the Shanghai Tower in Shanghai, China.

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