The Herald (Zimbabwe)

China’s electric car sector sparks investors interest

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AT least three foreign carmakers have announced plans so far this year to invest in China’s new energy vehicle (NEV) industry, a move demonstrat­ing their commitment to the Chinese market and their ambition to explore the burgeoning sector.

In April this year, Toyota Motor Corp. and China’s leading NEV manufactur­er BYD forged a 50-50 joint venture to jointly develop car batteries and electric vehicles.

In late May, German car-maker Volkswagen announced that it would invest around €2,1 billion (about US$2,3 billion) in electric mobility in China, of which €1 billion will be used to raise Volkswagen’s stake in the e-mobility joint venture with Chinese JAC Motors from 50 percent to 75 percent and to acquire a 50 percent stake in JAC’s parent company JAG.

In another deal, Volkswagen will pump the remaining €1,1 billion into Gotion Hightech, a Hefei-based manufactur­er of electric batteries, becoming the latter’s largest shareholde­r. Both parties agreed to co-operate in the field of electric vehicle batteries, and Gotion will become a certified supplier of Volkswagen.

It was the first time for Volkswagen, in its nearly 40 years of operation in China, to join the strategic developmen­t of a Chinese auto-maker and become a shareholde­r of a private enterprise. It is living proof of China’s strong determinat­ion of reform and opening-up, said Stephan Wollenstei­n, CEO of Volkswagen Group China. He added that by opening up the market, China has brought new business opportunit­ies to Volkswagen.

Additional­ly, this year Volkswagen plans to invest another € 4 billion in China. According to its developmen­t plan, Volkswagen expects to deliver around 1,5 million NEVs to Chinese customers by 2025.

Foreign automakers usually prefer to set up an individual company or cooperate with Chinese partners in the form of a joint venture. Volkswagen yet decided to invest in JAG and Gotion, both based in the city of Hefei in eastern China’s Anhui Province, and this shows Volkswagen’s determinat­ion to localize the industrial chain, said Cui Dongshu, secretary general of the China Passenger Car Associatio­n.

After Volkswagen announced its ambitious involvemen­t in China’s NEV sector, BMW followed suit by inking a contract with the leading charging station provider State Grid EV Service Company, in a bid to promote e-mobility in China.

Foreign automakers have not just focused on one aspect of the NEV sector, but have set their sights on the overall industrial spectacle including battery R&D, vehicle production and charging facilities constructi­on.

Since China has the largest auto market in the world with enormous growth potential, it is crucial for German car-makers to cooperate with Chinese companies and consolidat­e their position in China, Ferdinand Dudenhoeff­er, founding director of the Centre for Automotive Research at the University Duisburg-Essen, said in an interview with Xinhua.

In this year’s government work report, China highlighte­d the importance of new infrastruc­ture constructi­on. The country has vowed to expand 5G applicatio­ns and build more charging facilities to promote the wider use of NEVs.

Cities across China have adopted various policies to subsidise the constructi­on and use of charging stations. Beijing announced to build at least 50 000 new charging posts and about 100 battery-changing stations by 2022. Besides, NEV users would be granted subsidies for electricit­y fees in Shanghai, Hefei, and several other cities.

China has listed the industry of charging posts as one of its “new infrastruc­tures” and a further boom in this sector is in the offing.

By the end of April, the number of charging posts across the country registered a year-on-year growth of 35 percent to around 1,29 million, which is 20,000 higher from the end of March, according to Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastruc­ture Promotion Alliance.

On the other hand, the number of NEVs in China had reached 3.81 million by the end of 2019, a growth of over 1 million in two consecutiv­e years, said the Ministry of Public Security.

According to the latest statistics by the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers, the country’s production and sale of NEVs rose at a faster rate in May. In May, NEV production and sales increased by 3,5 percent and 12,2 percent month on month to 84 000 and 82 000, respective­ly.

In five to eight years, NEVs are expected to keep pace with fuel-driven vehicles in terms of competitiv­eness, said Fang Yunzhou, president of the Hozon New Energy Automobile, noting that NEV firms should enhance research and developmen­t, innovate marketing modes and strengthen cooperatio­n among industrial chains. -Xinhua.

 ??  ?? The number of new energy vehicles in China reached 3,81 million by the end of 2019, a growth of over 1 million in two consecutiv­e years
The number of new energy vehicles in China reached 3,81 million by the end of 2019, a growth of over 1 million in two consecutiv­e years

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