Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chinese EVs getting security check ahead of sales in U.S.

- MACKENZIE HAWKINS

The United States will investigat­e potential data and cybersecur­ity risks posed by Chinese electric vehicles and other internet-connected cars, the Commerce Department said late last week intending to act before their manufactur­ers expand into American markets.

The U.S. isn’t yet calling for a ban of Chinese EVs but could impose some limitation­s on imports of the vehicles or parts, an administra­tion official told reporters on condition of anonymity.

Potential curbs could affect a range of connected and autonomous vehicles, as well as related components from China and other foreign adversarie­s, the official said.

“We’re doing it now before Chinese-manufactur­ed vehicles become widespread in the United States, and potentiall­y threaten our privacy and our national security,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told reporters.

Chinese auto companies have a very limited presence in the U.S. because of a 27.5% tariff introduced under former President Donald Trump. The Biden administra­tion is considerin­g hiking those duties even higher, but officials are worried that tariffs alone won’t be enough to keep Chinese cars out of the country, Bloomberg has reported, as firms route shipments through third countries and set up shop in places like Mexico.

The European Union, meanwhile, is already working to block Chinese EVs, on economic rather than national security grounds.

The investigat­ion announced last week fits into the administra­tion’s broader goal of supporting the U.S. auto industry and watching investment patterns of Chinese firms like BYD Co., the official said — but it’s specifical­ly motivated by national security risks. There was not a particular incident or finding that spurred the investigat­ion, the official said, but rather concerns that arose out of a constant review of

threats posed by China, the main U.S. geopolitic­al rival.

Chinese automakers have grown into some of the biggest players in the EV market, in part from widespread government subsidies and support. BYD sold more fully electric vehicles than Tesla Inc. in the fourth quarter of last year, offering a broader lineup of less expensive cars.

Beijing has its own restrictio­ns on foreign vehicles operating in the world’s second-largest economy, including a ban on Tesla cars from certain government and military locations over national security concerns. Chinese regulation­s also require automobile companies to store and process troves of data within the country — a rule that could cover sensitive personal informatio­n collected by EVs, from license plates to facial characteri­stics.

Raimondo first outlined the administra­tion’s security concerns in remarks at the Atlantic Council last month, one week after the Commerce Department appointed a new director of the office that will run the investigat­ion. That office will accept public feedback over the next 60 days, the official said, but is not committed to a specific time frame for a final policy decision.

The administra­tion recently unveiled a separate, broader executive order on data security across a range of industries, as first reported by Bloomberg News last month. The investigat­ion announced last week is overlappin­g but distinct, a second administra­tion official said, with a focus on cybersecur­ity in addition to data.

 ?? (Bloomberg/Mariceu Erthal) ?? BYD Co. electric vehicles sit in the company’s showroom in Mexico City in October.
(Bloomberg/Mariceu Erthal) BYD Co. electric vehicles sit in the company’s showroom in Mexico City in October.

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