The Columbus Dispatch

GM chief in China challenges planned bans of gasoline cars

- By Keith Bradsher

SHANGHAI — Cars should run on gasoline for a little while longer.

So argued Mary Barra, the chief executive of General Motors, who on Friday cautioned against the growing trend of officials in China and a number of other countries making plans to phase out sales of gasoline- and dieselpowe­red cars.

Speaking in Shanghai, Barra said her company was making a big push to develop electric cars but that consumers, not government dictates, should decide how cars are powered.

“I think it works best when, instead of mandating, customers are choosing the technology that meets their needs,” she said.

China this month joined other countries, including Britain and France, to say they will eventually ban sales of gasoline- and dieselpowe­red cars. Unlike those two countries, which said that they hope to halt sales in 2040, China has not set a date.

Targets set more than two decades in the future, which is roughly four generation­s of car technology, are to a considerab­le extent symbolic. But automakers make a lot of long-range plans and are sensitive to how government targets may influence consumers’ preference­s.

When it comes to China, the issue is more than academic for the Detroit automaker. More GM-branded cars are now sold in China than in the United States.

The potential bans call into question GM’s plans to tackle the next generation of new energy vehicles. GM has focused much of its efforts on developing plug-in hybrid vehicles. These cars, like the latest version of the Chevrolet Volt, have batteries that can allow them to travel 100 miles or more per charge.

But they also carry gasoline engines and gas tanks that then allow them to travel several hundred miles farther. The announceme­nts of Britain, France and China could be read as possibly prohibitin­g plug-in hybrids because they call for cars not to emit any greenhouse gases.

Geopolitic­s play a considerab­le role in the issue. China is unenthusia­stic about plug-in hybrids because most of the patents are owned by foreign automakers.

China issued draft regulation­s in June to require all automakers to begin selling large and ever-growing numbers of so-called new-energy vehicles over the next several years.

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