China Daily

Competitor­s learn to work together

Automakers sign cooperativ­e deals to develop advanced technologi­es, platforms, batteries, Li Fusheng reports.

- Contact the writer at lifusheng@ chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese carmakers are opening up more widely to each other, which is expected to help them better brace for both challenges and opportunit­ies in the fastchangi­ng industry by slashing costs and pooling resources.

One of the latest examples is a deal inked last Tuesday by China’s largest SUV producer, Great Wall Motor Co, and the State-owned carmaker BAIC Group. The two vowed to join hands in vehicle platforms, power trains and new technologi­es.

The partnershi­p is expected to cut not only financial cost but also reduce demands for human resources and time needed for developmen­t, Great Wall Motor said in a statement.

As long as such deals are beneficial for all parties, “we’d like to explore two-party or even multiple-party cooperatio­n, be it sharing vehicle platforms or production capacity,” said Wei Jianjun, chairman of the carmaker, after the deal was signed.

Wu Wei, an industry official at the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said new trends in the automotive industry are forcing carmakers to make huge investment­s while maintainin­g their competitiv­eness in traditiona­l vehicles, so they should seize the initiative to increase cooperatio­n, which may prove critical in their future developmen­t.

Such “huddling for warmth” among carmakers is most common now in emerging auto sectors, including new energy cars and mobility services, to get the ball rolling.

China is the world’s largest car market for new energy cars, but such vehicles accounted for less than 3 percent of new car sales in the first half of the year, according to statistics from the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers.

Analysts said such a figure makes it difficult for any player to see scale effects, and costly new technologi­cal possibilit­ies are emerging, making the idea of “minding one’s own business” obsolete.

That is probably why BYD Co, China’s best-selling new energy car producer, is planning to establish a joint venture that produces and sells batteries with

VV5, a model from Great Wall Motor’s upscale Wey brand, is displayed at an auto show in Fuzhou, Fujian province.

Chongqing Changan Automotive Co.

According to a deal signed last month, the partnershi­p will have a designed capacity of 10 GWh a year, and is expected to establish an industry-leading platform for batteries and thus build up the competitiv­eness of the two in the sector.

The move marks BYD’s first ever effort to share its batteries, which have been at the very core of the carmaker’s competitiv­e edge in the new energy car sector.

Changan said it will hold a stake in BYD’s battery business, which will cement their relationsh­ip and forge comprehens­ive strategic cooperatio­n.

“It marks crucial progress in opening up our supplies and sales system, which is of great significan­ce to our battery business and even the whole group’s business,” said BYD Chairman Wang Chuanfu.

Besides batteries, the two also plan to join hands in developing new energy cars, smart connectivi­ty and autonomous driving. Changan was the first Chinese carmaker to announce a plan to stop production of convention­ally powered vehicles by 2025, and hopes to market its Level-3 autonomous driving cars by 2020.

Changan has also set up a joint venture with FAW Group Corp and Dongfeng Motor Corp to establish a ride-sharing platform to get a slice of China’s growing mobility market, currently dominated by Didi Chuxing.

The new venture, called T3 Mobile Travel Services, would introduce partners from other industries to build the service and seek to make use of the developmen­t of driverless cars to offer safer and more efficient travel services.

“The three major car companies have joined forces to enter the field of shared travel, which provides an opportunit­y to transform traditiona­l car enterprise­s,” Changan said in a statement.

The move came after the three firms signed a cooperatio­n agreement in December 2017.

Partnershi­p is also found in new energy car sales, including the one between BAIC and Brilliance Auto, which was signed in late June, to produce and sell new energy cars in Northeast China, where Brilliance is headquarte­red.

The two will build a joint venture that will offer new energy taxis, logistic vehicles and rental cars, which BAIC Chairman Xu Heyi said will not only benefit both carmakers’ developmen­t but also help to explore the mode for future partnershi­ps among Chinese brands in terms of new energy cars.

John Zeng, managing director at LMC Automotive Shanghai, said there is no doubt that cooperatio­n is needed as new trends emerge, but what the results will turn out to be hinges primarily on whether they can fulfill the deal as promised.

It marks crucial progress in opening up our supplies and sales system, which is of great significan­ce to our battery business and even the whole group’s business.”

Wang Chuanfu, chairman of BYD

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