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China Automobile Industry, Technology (NEV, Driverless, etc): News & Images

EV sales growth, production slow down
China Daily, October 17, 2016

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BYD Auto's representative and the new energy vehicle maker's four models are pictured at the Wuhan Motor Show in Wuhan, Hubei province, on Oct 12. [Photo by Hao Yan/China Daily]

Growth in the new energy vehicle market was hit in September due to the government's postponement of the release of an electric bus subsidy plan, after extensive fraud cases dealt a heavy blow to the sector.

A total of 289,000 new energy vehicles were sold in the first nine months of 2016, more than double that during the same period last year, according to China Association of Automobile Manufacturers on Oct 12.

But, about 44,000 new energy vehicles were shifted in September, with growth slowing to 44 percent year-on-year, almost half the 85 percent monthly growth seen in August.

The significant slowdown in the sector came after the government slammed on the brakes, postponing the detailed subsidy scheme for new energy coach and bus products.

CAAM Deputy Secretary-General Shi Jianhua said: "The government policy gives strong clout to the development of the new energy vehicle sector. Without the subsidy plan, the nation would struggle to meet the 500,000-unit sales volume target this year."

He expects that the updated subsidy scheme will be released soon, and that carmakers will quickly feel the effects.

The Ministry of Finance's second round of penalties started from Oct 12, with two listed companies, including Chongqing Lifan Passenger Vehicle, whose 2,395 electric vehicles manufactured from 2015 onwards failed to meet requirements.

Lifan's EV production plunged in August, with only 13 electric buses rolling off the production line, 95 percent less than its volume in August 2015.

On Sept 8, the MOF announced penalties for five new energy coach makers involved in abusing a total of over 1 billion yuan ($149.2 million) of subsidies.

Four ministries joined forces in January to probe 92 domestic EV makers for illegally obtaining government subsidies. Local media outlets revealed that major domestic brands were on the list, including FAW Group, SAIC, Dongfeng Motor, BAIC Group, BYD Auto, Zhejiang Geely, and Chery Automobile.

The scam took advantage of the government's intensified efforts to encourage the use of new energy vehicles, which aimed to upgrade the industry and ease pressure on the environment. The policies included tax exemptions, subsidies for car purchases and the requirement of government bodies to buy more new energy cars.

CAAM's statistics also showed that nearly 2.6 million passenger vehicles were sold in the world's largest auto market in September, a jump of 26.1 percent compared to last year.

The first nine months of 2016 saw a recorded vehicle sales volume of 19.4 million units, expanding 13.2 percent on the same period in 2015.

According to industry analysts, the momentum is due to a range of factors, including demand fueled by enthusiasm for sport utility vehicles, a lowered confidence in stock market investments and the determination of dealers to meet end-of-year sales targets.

Policy powered EVs

Director of the Manufacturing Industry Office of the State Information Center, Li Weili, indicated that the domestic new energy vehicle sector was driven by government policies instead of the market, with the country giving the "most generous subsidies in the world".

Selling a single fully electric bus used to be eligible for hundreds of thousands of yuan in subsidies, from both central and local governments. Meanwhile, a fully electric car would be eligible for more than 100,000 yuan in total in some places, where district-level subsidies were available besides the municipal and central governments.

The central government subsidy scheme defined a decreasing amount of incentives for the five years of 2016-20, in the hope of encouraging EV makers to lower their prices while discouraging reliance on subsidies. The amount of subsidies from the municipal level would match the amount from the central government.

However, to maintain the market size after the government subsidy has faded away, the EV price needs to be lowered to a similar level to combustion engine vehicles, and to do so, the cost of an AA battery cell has to be lowered to around 1 yuan each, according to Li's calculation.

Take Tesla's battery pack as an example. It is made up of more than 7,000 of the commodity battery cells with "best pricing" that ranges from 80 cents to $2 and up per cell, according to earlier media reports.

Li said: "The future lies in traction battery technology breakthroughs, but an alternative has not yet been identified. The most important aspect in traction batteries is product consistency, so robot automation is the key to domestic EV production."

"The development road is going to be a bumpy one in the next 10-20 years, after five years of smooth development."

Fu Yuwu, chairman of the Society of Automotive Engineers of China said: "Government bodies have been proactive in supporting innovations in the field, but its industrial scale is the foundation of the technology's development."

The domestic market overtook the United States in 2015, becoming the world's largest for new energy vehicles. The number of new energy vehicles sold last year more than tripled year-on-year to 331,100 units, from 74,763 in 2014, according to CAAM data.

However, the current market situation does not reflect future competition. The major international carmakers are waiting and watching. In August, Volkswagen announced its local production plan for new energy models.

Li said: "The big auto makers have existing product design and technology in hand, but they won't start until they have to. Some of them have not entered the EV field, but they will as soon as the credit system launches."

"The subsidy is the carrot, and the future dual credit system is the stick."
 
Beijing Hyundai's new plant starts operation
Xinhua, October 19, 2016
The first car to be produced by Beijing Hyundai's new auto plant in Hebei Province rolled off the assembly line Tuesday.

The facility is Beijing Hyundai's first factory outside Beijing. It is located in an economic development zone in Cangzhou City, with an annual production capacity of 300,000 vehicles and 200,000 engines.

Beijing Hyundai is a joint venture between Beijing Automotive Industry Holding Co. Ltd and the Republic of Korea's largest car maker Hyundai Motor. It has three assembly plants in Beijing.

Construction of the Cangzhou plant began in April 2015, and the project cost 12 billion yuan (1.78 billion U.S. dollars). Besides subcompact sedans, it will manufacture SUVs, including an electric model.

The endeavor is the largest project, in terms of investment, between Beijing and Hebei. Beijing is moving some plants to neighboring Hebei as part of the coordinated development of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.

Guo Wanyi, head of the administration committee of Cangzhou economic zone, said the auto plant in Cangzhou will boost the development of supporting industries such as auto parts manufacturing and logistics, which will have a joint output of more than 100 billion yuan.
 
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-honda-china-idUSKBN12I00U
TECHNOLOGY NEWS|Tue Oct 18, 2016 | 2:08am EDT
Honda planning new China car factory for 2019 start: sources

plans to build a new factory in China that will produce passenger cars from 2019, boosting its output capacity in the country by about a fifth, two people familiar with the matter said on Tuesday."

ByMaki Shiraki|TOKYO

Honda Motor Co plans to build a new factory in China that will produce passenger cars from 2019, boosting its output capacity in the country by about a fifth, two people familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.

Honda and partner Dongfeng Motor Group Co are experiencing explosive growth in China with sales for their joint venture soaring 48 percent for the year to date thanks to the popularity of the XR-V sport-utility vehicle as well as the recently launched Civic sedan.

At the same time, the venture, Dongfeng Honda, is coming close to its capacity limits at its two factories, targeting sales of 450,000 vehicles for 2016 - not far off current annual capacity of 480,000.

The new factory will be located in Wuhan, central China, a major auto hub. It will initially produce 120,000 cars a year, with capacity likely to double eventually, the sources said, declining to be identified as there had not been a formal announcement by the companies.

Honda confirmed that it was discussing the additional plant in Wuhan with Dongfeng, but that it had nothing official to announce now. A Beijing-based spokesman for Honda said the project had yet to be formally approved by the company or the government.

The plan was initially reported by the Nikkei business daily, which said the venture planned to spend "hundreds of millions of dollars" on the factory.

The new factory would be Honda's seventh in China. Honda also has a joint venture with GAC Group called Guangqi Honda which has three plants. The Japanese automaker also has a separate plant for exports.

Honda said in April it was looking to boost car sales in China to 1.07 million cars this year. It sold 1.01 million vehicles in 2015, a 33 percent jump over the previous year.

Auto sales in China strengthened in September for a consecutive fifth month, rising to a three-and-a-half year high.
 
Hyundai to make China-only vehicles, green cars to battle local brands



By Hyunjoo Jin October 18, 2016
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The logo of Hyundai Motor Co. is seen on a wheel of a car at a Hyundai dealership in Seoul October 21, 2013. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
By Hyunjoo Jin

SEOUL (Reuters) - Hyundai Motor Co on Tuesday said it aims to make more China-only and environment-friendly cars at two new Chinese plants, as it strives to fend off competition from Chinese rivals and slowing growth in the world's biggest auto market.

The plans are part of a strategy announced on the opening of South Korean automaker's fourth Chinese factory, which will be followed by fifth plant next year.

Hyundai and sister Kia Motors Corp, which together rank third in China sales, saw their combined market share fall to 8 percent this year, hitting their lowest since 2007 as domestic rivals won customers with cheaper sport utility vehicles (SUVs).

To boost sales capability, Beijing Hyundai - a joint venture with domestic peer BAIC Motor Corp Ltd - replaced its head earlier in October as part of a reshuffle of China executives.

Hyundai said its new plants will each have annual production capacity of 300,000 cars, raising total capacity in its biggest market by about half to 1.81 million cars. Including Kia's output, total capacity would be 2.7 million.

"We will accelerate our efforts to achieve a market share of more than 10 percent again with the (factory) opening," Hyundai said in a statement on Tuesday.

China's passenger car market is projected to grow 1 percent in 2017 versus 10 percent this year, Hyundai Motor said, citing data from China's State Information Center (SIC). Tax breaks for small engine cars, which boosted 2016 sales, will expire at the end of December.

Hyundai said its new plants will build models of varying sizes to compete with low-cost domestic rivals. It aims to sell a China-only SUV from as early as next year, with more SUV models planned. Reuters earlier this year reported that Hyundai and Kia plan to launch three low-cost SUVs in China from 2017.

"Not all SUVs will win - but the (makers) who localize the designs and features to Chinese tastes will be the winners," said James Chao, Asia-Pacific managing director at researcher IHS Automotive. He said SUVs will account for 40 percent of the passenger vehicle market by 2023, from 34 percent this year.

Hyundai also said it aims to produce nine green vehicles - petrol-electric hybrid, plug-in hybrid, electric and fuel cell - in China by 2020, making up 10 percent of its sales in the country by that year. At present, green vehicles account for a fraction of Hyundai's China sales.

China surpassed the United States last year to become the largest maker of electric cars following government subsidies aimed at curbing pollution.

(Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell and Christopher Cushing)


https://www.yahoo.com/tech/hyundai-...uild-green-cars-china-030150011--finance.html
 
Tue Oct 18, 2016 | 3:34am EDT

China approves Qiantu Auto project to build 50,000 green vehicles per year

Oct 18 China's National Development and Reform Commission gave approval to Qiantu Auto (Suzhou) for a factory with capacity to build 50,000 green energy cars per year, the state planner said in a statement posted on its website Tuesday.

Qiantu Auto, a subsidiary of Beijing-based vehicle engineering and design contractor CH-Auto, will invest 2 billion yuan ($300 million) in the project, the NDRC said.

http://www.reuters.com/article/china-autos-green-idUSB9N1CJ000
 
http://www.usatoday.com/story/money...ick-see-sales-soar----because-china/92363996/
GM's Buick sees sales soar -- all because of China
Greg Gardner, Detroit Free Press1:59 p.m. EDT October 18, 2016
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(Photo: GM)

General Motor's Buick brand is flying high -- all because of China.

Buick is now selling more than eight vehicles in the Asian nation for every one that leaves a showroom in the U.S.

As a result, Buick surpassed 1 million in global sales by the end of September, the earliest date in its history, thanks largely to the 860,384 vehicles it sold in China.

The global total of 1,046,746, is up nearly 200,000 from the first nine months of 2015. So China accounts for 82% of Buick's total sales, or five times as much as its U.S. sales.

One of those Chinese-produce models, the Envision, went on sale in the U.S. in July. So far dealers have sold about 6,100 in the U.S., while Chinese buyers have purchased about 140,000.

Buick has six models in the U.S., including three SUVs —- Encore, Enclave and Envision. The three sedans are the Regal, LaCrosse and Verano. A convertible, the Cascada, is imported from Poland.

The Verano will be discontinued in the U.S., but a new sedan and hatchback version of it will be sold in China. Other Buick models offered in China, but not in the U.S. include the Excelle XT, Excelle GT and GL8 minivan.
 
What the hell is going on? Why is Hyundai, Honda, Airbus, Boeing want to set up plants in china so badly?!
I've been so brainwashed by MSM and haters on PDF thinking China's economy is collapsing !

Didn't @frequency said Made in China cannot be trusted? It's garbage whenever products are made in China. Yet US JP SK and EU big enterprises all flooding into China for starting up their own plants. Are they out of their mind? Everybody should be building plants in Vietnam.
 
What the hell is going on? Why is Hyundai, Honda, Airbus, Boeing want to set up plants in china so badly?!
I've been so brainwashed by MSM and haters on PDF thinking China's economy is collapsing !

:o::lol:

Lincoln might become the latest automaker to build cars in China

Don't expect them to start arriving in the US in droves, though.

Andrew Krok

Lincoln might become the latest automaker to build cars in China

It's much easier to build cars close to where customers are buying them. Lincoln, experiencing a surge of demand in China, is considering building cars right there in The Middle Kingdom.

Lincoln, Ford's luxury brand, is currently investigating the feasibility of moving some of its production to within China's borders,Reuters reports. The company plans to have 65 Lincoln dealerships in China by the end of this year, up from previous estimates of 60. The end of 2017 will see that number expand to 80.

When an automaker imports cars into China, it has to pay tariffs, which means its cars are more expensive than if they were built in China. However, any foreign automaker manufacturing in China must partner up with one of the country's domestic automakers in accordance with Chinese law. Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz and rival General Motors all have joint ventures established.

Lincoln nearly tripled its Chinese sales in Q3 2016, selling 8,546 vehicles. That's well behind Cadillac's sales, which amounted to 12,500 units in September alone. Lincoln is hoping that the all-new Continental sedan, which heads to China in Q4, could give it another sales bump.

Nevertheless, barring the logistics of establishing a joint venture, it would be wise for Lincoln to set up a manufacturing effort in China. Its demand for luxury vehicles isn't as explosive as before, but it's still a major player in the global luxury market, and Lincoln can't afford to miss out.

https://www.cnet.com/roadshow/news/lincoln-might-become-the-latest-automaker-to-build-cars-in-china/
 
What the hell is going on? Why is Hyundai, Honda, Airbus, Boeing want to set up plants in china so badly?!
I've been so brainwashed by MSM and haters on PDF thinking China's economy is collapsing !
This is the question bewildering hundreds of PDFers....
Why? Why China? Why again?



Didn't @frequency said Made in China cannot be trusted? It's garbage whenever products are made in China. Yet US JP SK and EU big enterprises all flooding into China for starting up their own plants. Are they out of their mind? Everybody should be building plants in Vietnam.
177528-1.jpg.gif


China Q3 GDP grows 6.7% as expected as construction booms :lol:
China is not a small economy.
6% of 11 trillion dollars, means a lot.
 
Actually, Korean cars faced fierce competitions. Technically, they have no advantages over domestic brands even their models released in mainland China have better configurations than in Korea.They have no idea but to keep investing in China, the huge market.

For green cars, I feel sorry for them coz their action is too slow. Good time is countable for them in mainland China's market. If the thaad missiles system determined to deploy, their products will be gradually abandoned for there are too many other alternatives. That's another sad stories if it comes to true.
 
In 2009, China produced 13.79 million automobiles, of which 8 million were passenger cars and 3.41 million were commercial vehicles and surpassed the United States as the world's largest automobile producer by volume. In 2010, both sales and production topped 18 million units, with 13.76 million passenger cars delivered, in each case the largest by any nation in history.[8] In 2014, total vehicles production in China reached 23.720 million, accounting for 26% of global automotive production.[9]

The number of registered cars, buses, vans, and trucks on the road in China reached 62 million in 2009, and is expected to exceed 200 million by 2020.[10] The consultancy McKinsey & Company estimates that China's car market will grow tenfold between 2005 and 2030.[11]

No body wants to miss out China automobile market, largest in the world.

General Motor was saved from bankruptcy by motor vehicles sales in China.

Hyundai is not in good financial shape, they need Chinese market badly.
 
China carmaker gains reputation of good after-sale services
Xinhua, October 28, 2016

A stereotype among many Egyptian car owners that China only manufactures cheap cars with poor quality and service may soon be broken with Chinese automakers beefing up their after-sale services in Egyptian market.

In a service center of Senova, a vehicle type of the Beijing Automotive Industry Corporation (BAIC), located on the outskirts of Cairo, Michael Awad, a super fan of the Chinese automaker's personal sedan, said that he came to buy a Senova vehicle following his brother's recommendation.

"My elder brother chose this car two years ago. The service center has been so supportive, so we bought another one. Now I am here to buy a third one," Awad said.

Awad told Xinhua that it was the comprehensive after-sale services BAIC offered that pushed him to make the decision.

"The service center receives us very well and does everything needed in the car no matter how slight (it is). My car has even received free oil and filter change here," he said.

The services provided in the center went far beyond maintenance and repairing: the second floor is a small cafe dotted with cozy sofas. You can even find a flat TV with video game console -- another reason for Senova's mainly young owners to drop by.

"The clients thought that a Chinese car will have an inexperienced and non-supportive service center. However, they have been surprised that we're one of the best service centers in Egypt regarding customer service and support," said Tarek Rafek, manager of Senova service center.

According to different sources, Egypt currently hosts five to eight million vehicles with 200,000 to 300,000 new ones sold each year. The number may seem unimpressive at first sight, yet once you put the most populous Arab country's 91 million residents into the equation, the market shows promise of potential growth.

Compared to the world's leading auto manufacturers, Chinese automakers are relatively new players who entered Egypt as late as the early 2000s. However, marques like BYD's F3, Chery's Tiggo and Geely's Emgrand can be seen everywhere on Cairo's crowded roads only a decade after.

Chinese-made cars reportedly accounted for 15 percent of the market share in Egypt in 2014.

Being a late-comer that entered Egypt in 2014, BAIC decided to win Egyptians' hearts with "best in town" after-sale services, as vice chairman of BAIC group Wei Huacheng told Xinhua during his recent visit to Cairo.

"Selling as many cars as possible is not enough. We also need to cater to customers' needs and provide satisfactory after-sale services," Wei said. "It is the only way to raise the profile of BAIC in Egypt."

Since the delivery of their first batch of cars to Egypt in August 2014, BAIC has managed to sell over 4,000 vehicles in the country.

Speaking of the future, Wei and service center manager Rafek are both optimistic.

Rafek, who have served six automobile companies in the past 11 years, told Xinhua that he saw "a future in BAIC."

He compared the entry of Chinese cars in the Egyptian market to that of Korean ones, saying that customers were reluctant about the Korean cars in the 1990s, but now Korean cars have become very common in Egypt, and that will also happen to the Chinese cars.

"I believe that if we maintain the current quality provided by BAIC, Chinese cars will further prevail in Egypt," he said.

Wei also expressed confidence of BAIC success in the Egyptian car market.

"Egypt's economy may be undergoing a hard time, but it is a country of 91 million people. This fact alone would make it a highly potential market," he said.
 

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