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

Green identity

Source: VCG Published: 2017/12/28

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Beijing starts to issue green license plates for new-energy vehicles (NEVs) on Thursday, after a number of cities introduced green license plates for NEVs from November 20. The green plates are attractive in cities like Beijing where license plate quotas are used to curb congestion and smog. There are more than 1 million NEVs in China, with 825,000 being pure electric vehicles, according to the nation's traffic authority. Photo: VCG

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1082554.shtml
 
China's State Grid to install 120,000 public EV charging piles by 2020
Source: Xinhua| 2018-01-15 22:36:56|Editor: yan



BEIJING, Jan. 15 (Xinhua) -- China's State Grid plans to establish an electric vehicle (EV) network of 120,000 public charging piles for electric cars by 2020.

The network will cover the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei-Shandong and Yangtze River Delta cities, and major cities in other regions, the State Grid Corporation of China (SGCC) said Monday.

In 2017, the State Grid EV Service Company installed charging piles in 10,000 parking spots in some old residential communities in Beijing and Shanghai, according to Jiang Bing, chairman of the company.

"Starting 2020, electric cars are likely to go beyond their nature as vehicles, and become a basic unit of the energy system," said Jiang.

SGCC aims to make intercity travel smoother for electric vehicles in China, with 3 million charging piles connected to its intelligent-vehicle online platform, according Jiang.

The online platform is connected with 19 pile operators, including China Southern Power Grid, Qingdao Teld New Energy, China Potevio, Star Charge and Shenzhen Clou Electronics, with 170,000 charging piles connected and over 800,000 users, he said.

According to Jiang, such a platform explores the energy storage value of electric cars by enabling them to be charged at the proper time and location, and will promote green development with smarter and safer power grid.

China has the world's largest new energy auto industry. The country sold more than 490,000 new energy cars in the first 11 months of 2017, and the sales are expected to exceed 577,000 units in the whole year, according to statistics by EV-Volumes, an electric vehicle sales database.
 
BYD's e-trucks lead in US market
By Aaron Hagstrom in New York | China Daily | Updated: 2018-01-29 10:07
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A mechanic uses an electrical grinder to finesse a frame of an electric vehicle at the BYD coach and bus factory in Lancaster, California, US.[Photo/Agencies]

Emerging competition, stricter emission norms to test firm's resilience

BYD, the Shenzhen, Guangdong-headquartered electric vehicle manufacturer, is expanding into the US market where it will make and sell electric short-haul trucks.

Outside of a few startups, BYD will likely face few challengers in the near term in the US.

BYD's US arm, which is based in Lancaster, California, began its operations in 2011 with electric buses. It offers medium and heavy-duty trucks designed for short hauls, and vehicles for seaport and railyard businesses.

Its customers include BNSF Railway and tenants of the ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach and San Diego.

In November, BYD-which stands for "Build Your Dreams" and is backed by Warren Buffet-delivered its first electric automated sideloader garbage truck to the California city of Palo Alto, in electric automaker Tesla's backyard.

The truck has a range of 76 miles (122 kms) per charge and the city projects fuel and maintenance cost savings of more than $16,000 annually.

"BYD is the only original equipment manufacturer (in the class 8 market) that is actively selling electric semitrucks in the United States," said Andy Swanton, vice-president of truck sales at BYD.

The company may face some competition from Missouri-based startup Orange EV, which exclusively focuses on terminal trucks but does not build them from the ground up, instead retrofitting its electric motors into diesel truck bodies.

Another competitor could be Los Angeles-based startup Chanje Energy Inc, which exclusively sells medium-duty electric delivery vans, and builds them in China.

In December, Chanje began to deliver 125 of the vans to Ryder System Inc, and they are now available for lease or rent.

Long-haul electric trucks may not be manufactured in the US until 2019 because of heavy batteries and the hours-long charging requirements, which limit freight carried and distance traveled.

Price is also a problem. A medium-duty electric truck costs about $70,000 more than an equivalent diesel truck, according to the professional services firm Deloitte.

Trucks must meet stricter US emissions standards through 2027 under rules that went into effect in 2016. China is also tightening emissions standards

Diesel-powered short-haul trucks cause disproportionate levels of pollution because of stop-and-go driving. More than 6 percent of greenhouse gas emissions emitted in the US in 2015 came from medium and heavy-duty trucks, according to a report issued in July 2017 by the Environmental Protection Agency.

Vehicle manufacturers have a prime sales market in California because the state has the nation's strictest air-quality rules.

In 2016, the San Bernardino Associated Governments used $9.1 million in funds from proceeds of the state's cap-and-trade system to buy 27 BYD trucks to replace diesel-powered tractors.

The trucks will be used by freight hauler Daylight Transport at its Fontana transfer facility and by BNSF Railway at rail yards in San Bernardino and Commerce.

According to website Trucks, the aim of the two-year project is to collect data on performance and operating costs and to reduce air pollution in disadvantaged communities, which state officials have said are disproportionately affected by diesel truck emissions.

Several companies will soon join BYD in the electric truck market.

For instance, in December, Tesla sold 125 pre-ordered trucks to United Parcel Service Inc, one of the largest known orders so far. The package delivery company is expanding its fleet of alternative-fuel vehicles.

In the same month, Anheuser-Busch also ordered 40 Tesla heavy-duty semitrucks, as part of its goal to reduce its operational carbon footprint by 30 percent by 2025. The trucks won't be available until 2019 or later.

Tesla has also received preorders from such major companies as Walmart, fleet operator J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc and food service distributor Sysco Corp

Companies will most likely use Tesla trucks for short hauls in the range of about 20 to 250 miles, Jerry Hirsch, editor of Trucks told CNN last November.

US-based truck manufacturer Navistar and Volkswagen said last year that they would launch an electric medium-duty truck in North America by late 2019, and develop hardware and systems to connect trucks to the internet.

Tesla, Thor, and Cummins are aiming to produce battery-electric trucks by 2019 or later.

Therefore, success, or lack thereof, in the US market would determine how BYD's "go-global" strategy will pan out.

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An employee steps out of the workshop of BYD in Lancaster, California.[Photo/Xinhua]
 
'Make-or-break' opportunities in electric auto market, says BAIC Group

2018-01-29 11:08 China Daily Editor: Gu Mengxi

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BAIC Group's Lite model catches visitors' eyes at an new energy auto show in Beijing.(Photo provided to China Daily)

New energy cars and AI are presenting make-or-break opportunities for the automotive industry, said Xu Heyi, chairman of the State-owned Beijing Automotive Group Co, who warned that carmakers that do not seize them may end up losing it all.

The government has released a series of policies to stimulate the growth of new energy cars, and there will be no other way to go if Chinese carmakers do not work on such vehicles, said Xu at a recent media roundtable.

China is the world's largest market for new energy autos, with around 1.7 million such vehicles on its road as of the end of 2017, according to statistics from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

Xu said his group has set a goal to sell 650,000 new energy cars in 2020, with 500,000 of them from its own brands. The figure is expected to rise to 1.5 million by 2025, of which 300,000 will be exported.

BAIC Group is also one of the first traditional carmakers to release plans to phase out conventional cars under its brand. It is planning to stop its conventional car sales in Beijing by 2020 and phase them out nationwide by 2025.

In addition to its own BAIC-branded cars, the group also has manufacturing joint ventures with South Korean automaker Hyundai and Germany's Daimler AG, owner of the Mercedes-Benz brand.

BAIC Group and Daimler have reached a deal to invest a total of 5 billion yuan ($790.6 million) to localize electric Mercedes-Benz cars in Beijing. The group was one of the early birds to develop new energy cars, and its arm BJEV is now one of the most popular new energy car makers in the country.

Statistics show that BJEV sold a total of 103,199 electric vehicles in 2017, a year-on-year growth of 98 percent, becoming the country's largest electric carmaker by sales.

To support of its new energy vehicles, BJEV has installed 46,000 public charging poles and 32,000 private ones.

BJEV, which is valued at $4.5 billion, is also expected to become the first State-owned new energy carmaker to go public, according to Reuters.

An analyst said it is a good time for BJEV become listed in A-shares right now as investors have very positive views on electric car development in China going forward, with all markets convinced on an electrified future.

BAIC Group is also building a new energy car technology and innovation center in Beijing in cooperation with a number of institutions, including Tsinghua University and battery maker CATL.

The facility is expected to build an open platform that will better mobilize global innovative resources and facilitate cooperation among companies, universities, research facilities and users.

In terms of AI, BAIC Group is teaming up with Baidu, China's largest search engine operator, to work on autonomous cars.

As the market develops, it is something inevitable that manufacturing and AI become integrated, Xu said.

Xu said BAIC Group will roll out cars with Level 2, or hands-off, functions in 2018. Cars that enable drivers to take their eyes off the road will be on the market in 2019 and those that feature mind-off functions will be unveiled in 2022.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2018/01-29/290463.shtml
 
BYD's e-trucks lead in US market
By Aaron Hagstrom in New York | China Daily | Updated: 2018-01-29 10:07
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A mechanic uses an electrical grinder to finesse a frame of an electric vehicle at the BYD coach and bus factory in Lancaster, California, US.[Photo/Agencies]

Emerging competition, stricter emission norms to test firm's resilience

BYD, the Shenzhen, Guangdong-headquartered electric vehicle manufacturer, is expanding into the US market where it will make and sell electric short-haul trucks.

Outside of a few startups, BYD will likely face few challengers in the near term in the US.

BYD's US arm, which is based in Lancaster, California, began its operations in 2011 with electric buses. It offers medium and heavy-duty trucks designed for short hauls, and vehicles for seaport and railyard businesses.

Its customers include BNSF Railway and tenants of the ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach and San Diego.

In November, BYD-which stands for "Build Your Dreams" and is backed by Warren Buffet-delivered its first electric automated sideloader garbage truck to the California city of Palo Alto, in electric automaker Tesla's backyard.

The truck has a range of 76 miles (122 kms) per charge and the city projects fuel and maintenance cost savings of more than $16,000 annually.

"BYD is the only original equipment manufacturer (in the class 8 market) that is actively selling electric semitrucks in the United States," said Andy Swanton, vice-president of truck sales at BYD.

The company may face some competition from Missouri-based startup Orange EV, which exclusively focuses on terminal trucks but does not build them from the ground up, instead retrofitting its electric motors into diesel truck bodies.

Another competitor could be Los Angeles-based startup Chanje Energy Inc, which exclusively sells medium-duty electric delivery vans, and builds them in China.

In December, Chanje began to deliver 125 of the vans to Ryder System Inc, and they are now available for lease or rent.

Long-haul electric trucks may not be manufactured in the US until 2019 because of heavy batteries and the hours-long charging requirements, which limit freight carried and distance traveled.

Price is also a problem. A medium-duty electric truck costs about $70,000 more than an equivalent diesel truck, according to the professional services firm Deloitte.

Trucks must meet stricter US emissions standards through 2027 under rules that went into effect in 2016. China is also tightening emissions standards

Diesel-powered short-haul trucks cause disproportionate levels of pollution because of stop-and-go driving. More than 6 percent of greenhouse gas emissions emitted in the US in 2015 came from medium and heavy-duty trucks, according to a report issued in July 2017 by the Environmental Protection Agency.

Vehicle manufacturers have a prime sales market in California because the state has the nation's strictest air-quality rules.

In 2016, the San Bernardino Associated Governments used $9.1 million in funds from proceeds of the state's cap-and-trade system to buy 27 BYD trucks to replace diesel-powered tractors.

The trucks will be used by freight hauler Daylight Transport at its Fontana transfer facility and by BNSF Railway at rail yards in San Bernardino and Commerce.

According to website Trucks, the aim of the two-year project is to collect data on performance and operating costs and to reduce air pollution in disadvantaged communities, which state officials have said are disproportionately affected by diesel truck emissions.

Several companies will soon join BYD in the electric truck market.

For instance, in December, Tesla sold 125 pre-ordered trucks to United Parcel Service Inc, one of the largest known orders so far. The package delivery company is expanding its fleet of alternative-fuel vehicles.

In the same month, Anheuser-Busch also ordered 40 Tesla heavy-duty semitrucks, as part of its goal to reduce its operational carbon footprint by 30 percent by 2025. The trucks won't be available until 2019 or later.

Tesla has also received preorders from such major companies as Walmart, fleet operator J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc and food service distributor Sysco Corp

Companies will most likely use Tesla trucks for short hauls in the range of about 20 to 250 miles, Jerry Hirsch, editor of Trucks told CNN last November.

US-based truck manufacturer Navistar and Volkswagen said last year that they would launch an electric medium-duty truck in North America by late 2019, and develop hardware and systems to connect trucks to the internet.

Tesla, Thor, and Cummins are aiming to produce battery-electric trucks by 2019 or later.

Therefore, success, or lack thereof, in the US market would determine how BYD's "go-global" strategy will pan out.

An employee steps out of the workshop of BYD in Lancaster, California.[Photo/Xinhua]

@Kai Liu , MAGA? :D
 
Partnerships galore for new energy vehicles

2018-01-30 10:51 China Daily Editor: Gu Mengxi

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An employee works on the production line of Dongfeng Nissan Passenger Vehicle Co in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province. (Photo by He Jiajie/For China Daily)

Foreign brands form JVs with domestic auto companies to exploit opportunities

Volkswagen AG, which inked a deal with SAIC Motor in 1984 to build one of China's very first joint ventures for cars, repeated history in 2017.

The German automobile company, which now sells around 4 million cars a year in China, joined hands in June 2017 with Anhui Jianghuai Automobile Co to develop and produce electric cars, with the first model expected to roll off the assembly line this year.

The joint venture heralds a bigger wave of similar partnerships as new energy vehicles are now widely seen as the future.

The move has made Volkswagen the first international brand to have three carmaking partnerships in China, but it has an even greater meaning for China's fast-changing automotive landscape.

"The JV broke the decades-old convention that one international carmaker is allowed to have no more than two partnerships in one segment," wrote Liu Baohua, editor-in-chief of Auto Business Review magazine, in a review of auto industry trends in 2017.

Volkswagen and Jianghuai inked the deal on June 1 and the National Development and Reform Commission, the country's top economic planner, and the Ministry of Commerce confirmed the joint venture's legality on June 28, saying that electric carmakers are exceptions to the rule.

The revision came two months after China set a goal to build a globally competitive automotive industry within 10 years, with new energy vehicles and smart cars taking the lead worldwide.

In the guideline released in April, annual sales of electric, plug-in hybrids and fuel cell cars in the nation are expected to reach 2 million by 2020. They may account for 20 percent of new car sales by 2025.

The authorities started contemplating in 2016 a policy that demands carmakers produce a certain number of new energy cars, or they would be fined. The policy was introduced in September 2017.

Analysts argued that the immediate goal of Volkswagen's new partnership is to meet the government's demand, as it is stipulated in the deal that Volkswagen will enjoy priority if it needs to buy credits from the joint venture.

So are the goals of other international brands that have followed suit. Among them are Ford Motor Co, which signed a memorandum of understanding with Zotye Automobile Co in August 2017 to build a 50:50 partnership that will develop, produce and sell a range of affordable electric cars in China under a new brand.

The joint venture did its part in changing China's automotive history: it's the first time that an international brand partnered with a private carmaker.

In the same month, the Renault-Nissan Alliance announced a deal with its old partner Dongfeng Motor Group to develop and sell electric vehicles in China.

The new joint venture will produce electric cars at a Dongfeng facility in Hubei province, with the first model, a compact SUV, starting production in 2019.

Four months later, Renault built another joint venture, this time with Brilliance China Automotive Holdings, to produce commercial vehicles, and part of their goal is to "achieve…an acceleration of electrifying powertrains as part of the partnership", according to Reuters.

"The logic is clear," Yale Zhang, managing director of Shanghai-based consulting firm Automotive Foresight, told China Daily in an earlier interview.

"As those international carmakers cannot come up with affordable cars immediately, they create joint ventures in China to produce lower-quality and lower-priced ones to earn the required credits."

The carmakers have more ambitious plans besides the short-term goals, especially when the new energy car sector is speeding up in the country.

Volkswagen has long made public its ambitious target: to sell 400,000 new energy vehicles a year in 2020, a fifth of the goal China has set, and 1.5 million units by 2025.

It will invest more than 10 billion euros ($10.22 billion) in China to promote e-mobility from now to 2025, by which time it will have about 40 locally produced new energy car models in China.

Volkswagen CEO Matthias Mueller said, "Just as we have played a key role in shaping mobility together with our partners in China over the past 30 years or more, we want to play our part in shaping the mobility of the future: electric, fully networked and in line with the needs of our customers."

Even before partnering with Zotye, Ford announced that at least 70 percent of Ford-branded vehicles sold in China will offer electrified powertrain options by 2025.

Daimler AG expects the Chinese market will have a substantial share in the global sales of Mercedes-Benz electric vehicles in the next few years.

"Therefore, local production will be key to the success of our electric car portfolio, and crucial to flexibly serving local demand for electric vehicles," said Hubertus Troska, a board member at Daimler AG.

He made the remarks when Daimler signed a framework agreement in July with BAIC Motor Corp to produce Mercedes-Benz-branded electric cars via their joint venture Beijing Benz Automotive.

"With our planned localization of electric cars and batteries with Chinese cells, we are dedicated to strengthening the region as an innovative hub for the automotive industry," Troska said.

And it is something that the Chinese authorities would like to see. In a document released in June 2017, the NDRC said that "carmakers are encouraged to make the most of international technologies, capital and human resources to raise the level of China's new energy vehicle sector".

China has been the world's largest market for such cars since 2015, with at least 1.72 million units on its roads by the end of 2017, according to the China Electric Car Charging Technology and Industry Alliance.

Statistics from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers show 777,000 new energy cars were sold in 2017, a 53.3 percent surge year-on-year. The association expected sales would exceed at least 1 million this year.
 
2017 China Electric Car Sales Blow World Out Of The Water — BAIC EC-Series Is A Superstar
January 29th, 2018 by Jose Pontes



China’s EV Market Share Hits 3.3%, BAIC EC-Series = Superstar


The rise and rise of the Chinese plug-in electric vehicle (PEV) market is unstoppable, with yet another record performance in December. A total of 102,000 new passenger PEVs were registered last month, up 130% year over year. Yes, that was just December, and it pulled the year-to-date count to over 600,000 units, up 71% compared to 2016.

As consequence of this rapid growth, in December, the PEV share hit a record 3.3% market share of the entire Chinese auto market, while the entire 2017 PEV market share ended at 2.1%. That’s firmly ahead of last year’s score (1.5%) and above the USA (1.2%) and Europe (~1.9%).

The Chinese PEV market represented roughly half of the 1.2 million plug-ins sold worldwide in 2017, while Chinese carmakers made 47% of all PEVs sold last year.

Despite exports still being symbolic, the domestic market is more than enough to absorb the current production, helped by the fact that it is a highly protected market — foreign brands represent only 4% of PEV sales. Of this small cake, 2% belongs to Tesla, with the remaining 2% being divided by all other automakers.

In December, small city cars had the upper hand again, with the BAIC EC-Series being the poster child of them. The BAIC EC-Series saw over 13,000 sales, which allowed it to reach #30 in the mainstream automotive ranking in China. It was a good month also for the BYD plug-in hybrids, with the Song and Qin joining the top 5 ranking in December.



Continue -> 2017 China Electric Car Sales Blow World Out Of The Water — BAIC EC-Series Is A Superstar | CleanTechnica
 
China's BAIC BJEV granted certificate to enter EU market

2018-01-31 09:44 Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

BAIC BJEV, a Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer, said the company has been granted an electric vehicle product safety certificate by German accreditation provider DAkkS.

Zheng Gang, general manager of BAIC BJEV, said the certificate signaled that the company is now allowed to enter the European Union's electric vehicle market.

Beijing Electric Vehicles Company (BJEV), the electric car-making arm of Beijing Automotive Industry Holding Corp. (BAIC), is one of the leading new-energy carmakers in China.

In 2017, Chinese consumers purchased about 777,000 new-energy vehicles, up 53 percent over 2016, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

A total of 468,000 electric cars were sold in China in 2017, while BAIC BJEV sold 103,200 electric cars, an annual increase of 98 percent.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2018/01-31/290780.shtml
 
2017 China Electric Car Sales Blow World Out Of The Water — BAIC EC-Series Is A Superstar

China style. It is the visionary China government who made this possible by planning ahead for the coming e-car revolution (along with AI-enabled cars).

China's e-vehicle push basically killed of Japan's hybrid push.

Along with AI, e-vehicle tech (which includes batteries) will be China's another strength for industry 4.0.
 
'Smart' roadway in Shanghai part of China’s push for new energy vehicles

2018-01-31 14:13 CGTN Editor: Mo Hong'e

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An electricity bus powered by a hydrogen fuel cell (Photo/Xinhua )

It's full speed ahead in China when it comes to the development of electric vehicles and the roads on which they travel.

To get a sense of where smart technology is headed, look no further than a so-called "intelligent" road in Shanghai which President Xi Jinping has positioned as a global innovation center.

The technology allows driverless "new energy vehicles," or NEVs to communicate with each other through sensors embedded in the road.

The cars can retrieve data about elements of the driving environment, including pedestrians and streetlights.

The idea is to create a greener environment, safer experience and better traffic flow.

"The key to intelligence lies in safety while networking is important for efficiency," said Rong Wenwei, board chairman of the Shanghai International Automobile City. "So the next decade will be one for redefining products, reshaping commercial models and recreating the consumption culture."

Construction is underway on the road which is now nearly 10 kilometers. The plan is to expand it to 150 by 2020.

China has already sped ahead of the pack in the world green car industry. According to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, China saw sales of new NEVs spike to 777,000 in 2017, up more than 50 percent from the year before.

"Our goal is to have 600,000 new energy vehicles by 2020 in the transportation sector," said Liu Baohua, vice director of the National Energy Administration. "We will promote and apply the intelligent management system of urban public transport and extend urban bus routes to suburban areas."

The government is encouraging demand by offering incentives like tax rebates and hopes reducing the costs of NEVs will fuel their popularity over traditional vehicles down the road.

http://www.ecns.cn/2018/01-31/290879.shtml
 
Chinese automaker FAW sees booming exports
Source: Xinhua| 2018-02-05 11:18:29|Editor: Liangyu


CHANGCHUN, Feb. 5 (Xinhua) -- Chinese auto maker First Automobile Works Group (FAW) exported 40,000 vehicles in 2017, representing robust growth of 92.7 percent from the previous year.

The company reported 3.408 million wholesale vehicle deliveries last year, up by 7.2 percent annually. The group recorded total market sales of 3.346 million units last year, growth of 7.7 percent from the previous year.

Last year, the group subsidiary FAW Jiefang and FAW Benteng both reported wholesale vehicle deliveries of 336,000 units respectively. The groups's joint ventures reported 2.691 million vehicle deliveries.

Thanks to the Belt and Road Initiative, the group has expanded overseas business to 48 countries, with the total export volume of wholesale cars and auto parts exceeding 5 billion yuan (793 million U.S. dollars).

The state-owned FAW group was founded in 1953 and headquartered in China's northeast Jilin Province. It was ranked 125 on the 2017 Fortune Global 500.
 
Nissan to invest 60 billion yuan in Chinese EV market

Nicholas Moore
2018-02-05


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Japanese car manufacturer Nissan announced Monday it will invest almost 10 billion US dollars in its China operations over the next five years, as it looks to become the country’s go-to brand for electric vehicles (EV).

Speaking to journalists in Beijing, Jun Seki, head of Nissan’s China business, said “our EV offensive starts in 2018.”

Seki, who met the press alongside representatives from Dongfeng Group, Nissan's Chinese partner, pointed to pressure from a rising domestic market as a push factor for the company's investment plans. “The growth in local competition has been much faster than we expected. Now we have come around to changing our local strategy.”

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VCG Photo‍

The 60 billion yuan (9.53 billion US dollars) investment plan will aim to sell 2.6 million vehicles by 2022 – a 70 percent increase from 2017. Together with Dongfeng, Nissan will develop and release 40 new models between then and now, half of which will be electric vehicles.

Nissan, makers of the Leaf – the world’s best-selling electric vehicle – have focused their investment on the EV market at a time when China and other major car markets are announcing new policies supporting the industry.

In 2016, China represented 45 percent of the global EV market with 507,000 vehicles sold, thanks to massive investment in infrastructure and subsidies.

Authorities last year were reportedly looking at banning petrol and diesel cars at some point in the future, following similar moves in France and the UK to stop sales of emitting vehicles by 2040.

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300,000 Nissan Leaf vehicles have been sold worldwide. /VCG Photo

Nissan will look to take advantage of China’s EV revolution by rapidly boosting its presence in the market. Nissan is already the third biggest car manufacturer in China after Volkswagen and General Motors, selling 1.52 million vehicles with Dongfeng in 2017 – a 12 percent increase on the previous year.

Several other major car manufacturers are investing heavily in the Chinese car market, after seeing rising sales. Sales of Honda vehicles jumped 15.5 percent in 2017, with Nissan’s Japanese rival also working with Dongfeng to develop a new factory in Wuhan – its third production plant in the country.

South Korean manufacturer Hyundai has seen its sales slump in recent years, but announced plans in October to regain its position as one of China’s most popular car brands, including the launch of a big data research center in southwestern Guizhou Province.
 
Geely reaches for the skies
China Daily, March 1, 2018

For Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, even the sky is no limit to its ambition, literally. The Chinese carmaker, which made headlines last week by becoming the largest shareholder in Mercedes-Benz owner Daimler, is to produce flying cars in China.

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A flying car named the TF-X lands at Lawrence Municipal Airport, Massachusetts. [Photo/China Daily]

A Geely representative confirmed on Wednesday to China Daily that it is hiring engineers, who must be English-speaking, to help introduce and test-produce prototypes from Terrafugia Inc, a US-based flying car maker Geely acquired in November 2017.


The company is also seeking contractors to renovate workshops in a passenger car production facility in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, for the same purpose.


Geely said it expects to finish the development of Terrafugia's first model, TF-1, and launch it in the United States by July 2019. The model's technical specifics remain unknown.


According to the company's plan, the model will be developed in the US but manufactured in China, although the Geely representative said the final production site has yet to be determined.


John Zeng, managing director of LMC Automotive Shanghai, said it is a good choice that it first targets the North American market, where there is less regulation of airspace and a smaller population than in China.


Such cars are very unlikely to hit the Chinese market in the short term due to the country's low-altitude flying regulations.


Terrafugia, founded in 2006 by five graduates of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, built and flew its first flying prototype in 2009, and came up with an updated version in 2012.


In 2013, the company released the design for its next model, the TF-X, which was the world's first flying car to take off and land vertically.


The four-seat model, which has a cruise speed at 320 km per hour, will be available in 2023, said Geely in a statement at its acquisition of Terrafugia. It did not reveal financial details of the deal.


Li Shufu, founder and chairman of Geely, said he believes flying cars are a tremendously exciting sector.


"We believe that Terrafugia is ideally positioned to change mobility as we currently understand it and herald the development of a new industry in doing so."
 
The Rise of domestic Chinese car design forces

Ge Yunfei
1888km to Beijing
2018-03-04

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Foreign car companies have dominated China’s middle and high-end auto market for decades, while domestic automakers could only look on in envy. But in Guangzhou, a coastal city in south China, one Chinese car designer is preparing to challenge the foreign brands on their own turf.

In 2017, a Chinese-made SUV successfully squeezed into the middle and high-end market. It’s the Trumpchi GS8, a seven-seat midsize SUV that’ll also be available in the US in 2019.

The move makes its producer, GAC Motor, the first Chinese car brand to enter the US market.

Zhang Fan is the visionary behind the car. He’s a superstar in the Chinese auto design industry. Describing the work that went into designing the car, Zhang said, “For a car which is over 4.5 meters long, we actually care every movement of the vehicle down to the millimeter, even 10 percent of one millimeter. Just to make sure the vehicle, the shapes, the lines are at their best. And all the highlights of the car are running perfectly."

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“Welcome back to work in the Chinese automobile industry. You will not regret it,” Zhang Fan said. /Screenshot

Good design usually comes with a higher price tag. But Zhang says China’s growing middle class is now willing to pay for quality. This is the best time for Chinese car designers. “Chinese customers like to have good-looking cars. And this kind of likeability is very special, I would say it's more (significant) than in other markets in the world. And the Chinese market has capacity for all the new stuff. Being a designer is all about creating something new. Right now you actually have this opportunity, not only to create something new, but also to establish something. So I think this will be a paradise for designers.”

Though more and more Chinese carmakers have shown their ambitions in creative designs, some companies are still bluntly copying successful designs of foreign brands. When he talks of those copycats, Zhang cannot hide his contempt. “It's most unfortunate. While they only take the so-called safe ways to copy other stuff, to take advantage of (others), this isn’t right. And it's not brave. And most importantly, it's an act that leaves you with no future.”

Zhang’s bet for the future is a futuristic and eye-catching electric concept SUV called Enverge. Since its conception, Enverge has been designed for the North American market and aimed squarely at young buyers.

Six years ago, when Zhang came back to China to design the Trumpchi series, he only had a team of around 20 young workers. Now he has over 300 people capable of launching four or five new models into the market each year.

“I would say to new young designers, welcome back to work in the Chinese automobile industry. You will not regret it. Just like what I have done.”

Zhang says being in the Chinese car industry right now is like sitting in a bullet train. And this is the moment for domestic car designers to make their histories.

@Kai Liu , @GS Zhou , @Jlaw , @AndrewJin
 

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