Toronto Star

Chinese EV makers shooting for the sky

Flying car among offerings at Bangkok auto show

- ELAINE KURTENBACH

Chinese electric vehicle makers are showcasing their latest models, including a flying car, as they take on global rivals at the Bangkok Internatio­nal Motor Show.

Companies like BYD, XPeng and Great Wall Motors are quickly growing their sales in Thailand, challengin­g long-standing market leaders like Toyota, Isuzu and Ford, as they expand exports across the globe. And Thailand, one of the biggest markets in Southeast Asia, a region of more than 600 million people, has made developing its EV market a priority.

Tesla launched sales in late 2022, offering its popular Model 3 and Model Y at prices aimed at competing with rivals like China’s BYD.

BYD, or Build Your Dreams, displayed a wide range of its EV lineup, including its Dolphin, a pure EV that it says runs 490 kilometres on a single charge and is priced at 859,999 Thai baht ($32,140).

At the higher end of the spectrum is the Seal, promising 580 kilometres on a charge and costing nearly 1.6 million baht.

BYD sold 30,650 EVs in Thailand last year, followed by 12,777 sold by Neta, a brand of Chinese electric vehicle maker Hozon Auto, which is based in eastern China’s Zhejiang province. They were trailed by Tesla, British brand MG and Chinese carmaker Great Wall Motor.

Also at the show: VinFast, a Vietnamese newcomer that says it plans to expand sales of its EVs to 50 countries by the end of this year. It is building or planning factories in the U.S., India and Indonesia.

Neta has announced plans to begin assembling EVs in Thailand, and Great Wall Motor bought a former General Motors plant in Rayong, south of Bangkok, as a base for its expansion into Southeast Asia.

Thailand’s market for EVs accounted for just 0.5 per cent of all EV sales globally, but nearly 60 per cent of EV sales in Southeast Asia in 2022, ahead of both Vietnam and Indonesia, according to market research firm Counterpoi­nt Research.

Thailand is already an auto manufactur­ing hub, with strong sales especially of pickups that are widely used for taxi services, hauling equipment for people running food stalls and carrying farmers’ crops to markets.

The roads are jammed with a wide array of models, with a strong presence of Toyotas, Hondas, Isuzus, Fords, Nissans and MercedesBe­nz. There’s also a hefty share of luxury models such as Porsches and Maseratis.

A nationwide network of charging stations is expanding quickly, but most vehicles on the roads are still gasoline, diesel and LPG-fuelled vehicles.

XPeng, a start-up based in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, is another newcomer to an already overcrowde­d market back home. But Paramee Thingcharo­en, its chief marketing officer, said the company saw plenty of opportunit­y and was testing the waters.

XPeng was displaying its XPeng AeroHT Voyager X2, a flying concept car. The flying car can be flown in China but was only on display in Bangkok since the company does not have a license to fly it in Thailand, Paramee said.

 ?? SAKCHAI LALIT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Visitors look at XPeng’s electric vehicles in Nonthaburi, Thailand, on Tuesday. Companies like XPeng are quickly growing sales, challengin­g long-standing market leaders like Toyota, Isuzu and Ford.
SAKCHAI LALIT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Visitors look at XPeng’s electric vehicles in Nonthaburi, Thailand, on Tuesday. Companies like XPeng are quickly growing sales, challengin­g long-standing market leaders like Toyota, Isuzu and Ford.

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