China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Nation to fuel up consumer interest in NEV purchases

Industry sees rise in battery charging, swapping infrastruc­ture across country

- By LI FUSHENG lifusheng@chinadaily.com.cn

Carmakers and battery manufactur­ers in China are speeding up to expand charging and batteryswa­pping facilities, which are expected to further fuel car buyers’ interest in new energy vehicles.

China has the world’s largest charging network, according to the China Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastruc­ture Promotion Alliance.

It said that by the end of June, there were 3.9 million public and private charging pillars in the country, a year-on-year increase of 101.2 percent.

This has been driven by the fast rise in the number of NEVs in the country, said the alliance.

Over 2.6 million electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids were sold in the first half, up 120 percent year-on-year, according to the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers. They accounted for 21.6 percent of all vehicles sold in the same period, said the associatio­n.

This brought the total number of NEVs in China to surpass 10 million through June, accounting for 3.23 percent of the total number of vehicles on roads.

As the growth of NEVs was higher than industry expectatio­ns, constructi­on of charging piles will see a new boom in the second half of this year, said Guolian Securities analysts in a research note.

In July, 17 ministries and commission­s issued a joint notice saying that China will implement a new wave of measures to spur car consumptio­n.

Measures mentioned in the notice include speeding up the constructi­on of charging facilities and guiding charging pile operators to appropriat­ely lower charging service fees.

Jason Wong, executive chairman of Shell Companies in China, said Shell has been stepping up its business in the country’s fast-expanding NEV sector.

“China is the leader in electric vehicle manufactur­ing and adoption globally. The new infrastruc­ture of EV charging will be muchneeded,” said Wong.

The company inked a deal in March with China’s BYD to develop the EV charging network. They will first operate a network of 10,000 charging pillars in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, where BYD is headquarte­red, and later expand the network to more locations nationwide.

BYD Chairman and President Wang Chuanfu said the automotive industry is undergoing significan­t changes, and it will seize the opportunit­ies with Shell to boost NEV consumptio­n.

Chinese electric carmaker GAC Aion launched its first supercharg­ing center in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, in April. The 480-kilowatt super charging piles at the center can extend vehicle distance by over 200 kilometers in five minutes, it said.

“Building more super-charging and power exchange centers will help promote the wide use of NEVs,” said Gu Huinan, general manager of GAC Aion.

Some companies are exploring the battery-swapping segment, eyeing it as an alternativ­e to charging.

Getting electric vehicles fully charged usually takes hours, but empty batteries can be swapped for full ones in just minutes. Dozens of models, from carmakers including Nio, BAIC and FAW, are now capable of battery-swapping.

Their combined sales in the first four months of this year reached 42,000 units, up 54 percent yearon-year, according to battery website GG-LB.

Chongqing-based Livan Automotive is planning to launch at least six EV battery-swapping stations in three years. The carmaker already has two such models on the market.

Lou Yuanfa, Livan’s chairman and CEO, said, “Battery-swapping technologi­es hold the key to the future of the EV segment.”

By the end of this year, Livan is expected to have over 200 batterysta­tions in the country.

Nio, a New York-listed EV startup, has built more than 1,000 stations for EV batteryswa­pping. Guo Dongqiang, a Nio ES6 owner in Beijing, said he has yet to charge his vehicle since buying it in late 2020.

“There is a power station near my apartment where I usually swap batteries. It is a pretty fast process,” Guo said.

Nio expects its battery-swapping stations to reach 1,300 by the end of this year. It said it will add 600 more stations annually between 2022 and 2025 in China.

Unlike Nio, BAIC’s battery-swapping models are mostly taxis. They spend most of the time on the road, so charging is not an optimum choice, the carmaker said.

Chinese battery giant CATL is exploring the market as well. Its battery-swapping service, called Evogo, became available in Hefei, Anhui province, in June.

There will be three fast batteryswa­pping stations in Hefei at first, and it is estimated to reach 20 by the end of this year, the company said.

Evogo’s arrival in Hefei came within two months of the company’s first four stations’ opening in Xiamen, Fujian province. A total of 30 such stations are expected to be available in the coastal city.

Carmakers including FAW Bestune have launched models capable of swapping batteries at Evogo stations.

Chen Weifeng, president of CATL’s charging operations, said the new solution will solve a range of anxieties as well as the inconvenie­nce of recharging.

Analysts at Founder Securities estimate that there will be 3.2 million battery-swapping EVs across the country by 2025, with more than 28,000 battery-swapping stations.

There were 1,582 such stations by the end of June, according to the China Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastruc­ture Promotion Alliance.

Building more supercharg­ing and power exchange centers will help promote the wide use of NEVs.”

Gu Huinan, general manager of GAC Aion

 ?? HU XIAOFEI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A technician instructs a driver how to operate super-charging equipment in Jinhua, Zhejiang province, in July.
HU XIAOFEI / FOR CHINA DAILY A technician instructs a driver how to operate super-charging equipment in Jinhua, Zhejiang province, in July.

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