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China's electric carmakers bloom at Beijing auto show

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26 April 2018 - 17H58

China's electric carmakers bloom at Beijing auto show

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© AFP / by Julien GIRAULT, Ryan MCMORROW | A man takes a photo of Hanteng X5 EV car at the Beijing auto show

BEIJING (AFP) - Auto executives from across the globe are plugging their plans for an electric car future in China at the Beijing auto show, but they will find their Chinese counterparts are already motoring ahead.

Local carmakers and upstarts flaunted their latest plug-in models at the industry extravaganza this week, from sedans to SUVs and futuristic supercars fitted with the latest gadgets.

While American, Japanese and European auto giants dominate sales of combustion engine vehicles, Chinese firms are in the driver's seat when it comes to electric cars.

Policymakers in Beijing have been pushing the market to go electric, using a carrot and stick to drag along consumers and automakers through a quota system for manufacturers and subsidies to car buyers.

China hopes to reduce its dependence on imported oil and cut pollution, both strategic priorities for Beijing, and it has announced plans to phase out fossil fuel vehicles at a yet-to-be-decided date.

Unable to seed a company capable of competing on the global stage, the shift conveniently provides China a new opportunity to foster local champions in the world's largest car market.

Unencumbered by history and the billions sunk into refining gasoline engines, electric presents a clean competitive slate for homegrown automakers.

"The entry hurdle is lower with an electric drive train than it has been with a combustion engine, which requires experience or where at least the contenders have experience of 130 years," Dieter Zetsche, head of Mercedes-Benz cars, said at the auto show.

Zetsche welcomed the Chinese newcomers: "The moment you don't have competition you get lazy."

- Xi's market goals -

But it is unclear if the competition will take place on a level playing field.

"The government is supporting the development of EVs," said Li Zhuihui, marketing manager at newcomer Hanteng Auto, which is pushing into the electric vehicle market.

"There are financial incentives to research and build electric," he told AFP.

One key industrial policy wielded by Chinese President Xi Jinping called "Made in China 2025" aims for domestic automakers to control 70 percent of the electric vehicle market by 2020 and 80 percent by 2025.

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla motors, compared the environment to "competing in an Olympic race wearing lead shoes", in a tweet to United States President Donald Trump last month.

Still, China is one of Tesla's largest markets.

Roughly three-quarters of the gleaming electric car models on display in Beijing are homegrown, reflecting domestic firms' dominance on their home turf.

Last year new energy vehicles sales exploded 53 percent to 780,000 units in China, though they still constitute only 2.7 percent of the market.

International behemoths like Volkswagen and General Motors sold most of the 28.9 million units that changed hands here last year.

Despite both companies -- and a heap of other foreign automakers -- announcing huge investments in electric projects recently, Chinese companies have beaten them to the pavement.

China's BAIC ranked first in global EV sales last year, turning over 96,000 units, according to data from automotive research firm Jato Dynamics.

Chinese firms ZD, Geely, BYD, Zotye and JAC also racked up enough sales to make the top ten list of EV sales by volume.

In Beijing, car company Nio backed by IT giants Tencent and Lenovo, showed off a line of electric SUVs and supercars at its booth.

Jack Cheng, a co-founder of the startup, admitted the competition was fierce with 200 new players chasing a market the government hopes will reach two million in annual sales by 2020.

"Plus by 2020 the big guys are waking up so they may take a chunk of the volume," Cheng told AFP.

"But they are slow," he said, noting Nio's edge is the company's speed and nimbleness.

- Battery technology -

Batteries remain a critical piece of every electric car and Beijing's protective embrace of the technology may ensure China becomes the world's battery lab.

Fujian-based CATL is one major supplier benefitting from the policies.

"The technology you'll see in a CATL factory is as good as you'll see anywhere else in the world," said Trevor Worthington of Ford's product development division, which will use the firm's batteries in its Chinese electric models.

Hubertus Troska, head of Daimler's China business, said he too expected state policy to lead Mercedes-Benz to local suppliers.

"We will work with Chinese cell suppliers to anticipate and be in line with future regulation," Troska said.

The electric uptake has brought along prices for commodities like cobalt, a metal critical for light and durable batteries.

The price of cobalt has risen to $91,000 per tonne on the London Metal Exchange, roughly tripling in value since the beginning of 2016.

China has not yet figured out how to corner the supply chain for the crucial component, with CATL listing its rising price as a risk in its recent initial public offering prospectus.

And international mining giant Glencore has become one of CATL's largest suppliers, providing the firm with cobalt hydroxide.

by Julien GIRAULT, Ryan MCMORROW

http://www.france24.com/en/20180426-chinas-electric-carmakers-bloom-beijing-auto-show
 
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China Leading The Way To Electric Car Future: BYD, BMW Highlight Beijing Auto Show

April 26th, 2018 by Steve Hanley

Every morning before heading off to the pool for aqua gym, I check my Google Alerts to see if there are any electric car stories I think would interest CleanTechnica readers. This morning, there were a bunch of them and they had one word in common: China.

BYD Takes Center Stage



The Beijing auto show is going on right now, and Chinese automakers are pulling out all the stops to make an impression. There was a time when the world flocked to Detroit every January for what is grandly known as the North American International Auto Show, but today, if you want to know what’s hot in the world of automobiles, you have to go to Beijing to find out.

“The auto industry is undergoing a revolution which has never happened before. Internationalization, electrification, and intelligent connection have evolved from just ideas to reality,” says Wang Chuanfu, president and chairman of BYD in a press release. “We are at this historical turning point where BYD is stepping into the new era of automotive manufacturing with the world’s leading intelligent connected system DiLink and the e Platform which DiLink is a part of. BYD is reshaping the way of transportation.”

DiLink is a new connected car platform that features input from 341 sensors and has 66 control parameters. While those numbers are impressive, what is truly revolutionary about the system is that it is an open platform — a first in the automotive world.



In addition to new versions of its existing models, BYD introduced its latest concept vehicle, the E-SEED, which stands for Electronic Sports Experience Environmental Device. The company says it will accelerate to 100 km/h in 3.9 seconds and have a range of 600 kilometers. If true, that would give it the longest range of any production vehicle. What an all new electric SUV concept is doing with dual exhaust pipes is anyone’s guess, but there is no denying the concept has a lot of visual appeal.

BYD has offered few details about the E-SEED as of yet, but did say its next generation Tang, a very popular SUV in China, will have a range of 500 kilometers under real-world driving conditions.

BMW Rolls Out The iX3



BMW is still searching for its electric car identity. Sales of the i3 are okay but not setting the world on fire. The i8 continues to perk along, selling a few here and a few there, but BMW’s i division has not generated the kind of sales traffic the company was hoping for.

In Beijing, it showed off its iX3 concept, which is for all intents and purposes a battery electric version of the X3 SUV the company manufactures in South Carolina. Once again, details are few. We don’t know much about the battery or how it is mounted in the vehicle, but the company says it will have a 70 kWh battery, 270 horsepower, and a range of 250 miles. Eking out a few more miles of range than the base Tesla Model X or the upcoming Jaguar I-Pace with a smaller battery suggests BMW has been burning the midnight oil developing the iX3.

The real news here is that BMW intends to manufacture the iX3 in China, according to The Verge. The German company has quietly been moving production of the conventional X3 from South Carolina to China and may have plans to export cars made there to other countries. Nicolas Peter, CFO of BMW, told Reuters in Beijing, “Export is an option which we are evaluating very intensively.”

It’s all part of the great global trade dance being orchestrated by Donald Trump and Xi Jinping and it looks like BMW is at least hedging its bets, if not actually choosing sides.

As The Verge says, “That the production of the iX3 will take place in China is a sign of the increasing influence the country wields over the automotive industry — especially with respect to EVs. It’s the largest car market in the world, and it’s certainly the biggest for all-electric cars at the moment. With the government aggressively pushing to clean up the country’s greenhouse gas emissions while also loosening manufacturing restrictions on foreign automakers, it’s an attractive proposition to set up shop in China, especially if you’re making EVs.”

Even GM Has A Dog In This Fight



Mashable has made a list of 9 new electric car companies that are gearing up for production in China, including Nio, Byton, BAIC, Zhidhou, Changjiang, and Kandi. Clearly if you look at the ferment that is brewing electric cars in China and compare it to the slow walk American manufacturers are doing, the center of gravity for the future of the industry has shifted from Detroit to Asia.

Not to be left out, GM is taking advantage of this year’s Beijing auto show to take the wraps off its latest electric SUV concept, the Buick Enspire. Buick is a trade name that is falling out of favor in the US, but it is one of the more respected brands in China.

GM tells TechCrunch the Buick Enspire will be able to sprint to 60 mph in 4 seconds, thanks to its electric powertrain with 550 horsepower. Range is said to be 370 miles — the same as the E-SEED. An 80% battery charge can be accomplished in just 40 minutes using fast-charging equipment, and wireless charging capability is built in.

The styling of the Envision is inspired, even if the name is not. No doubt this concept is derived from the Chevrolet FNR-X plug-in hybrid SUV that graced the GM stand at last year’s Beijing show. No details have been released about the Envision — single motor? dual motor? — but it almost certainly leverages GM’s experience with the Chevy Volt and Chevy Bolt. When and if it goes into production, will it find its way back across the Pacific to America?

From China To The Great Beyond

No one knows, but for now, if you want a clue to the future of the automobile, you have to include China in your deliberations. But don’t make the mistake of assuming Chinese manufacturers are content to stay home and watch the money roll in. BAIC, which is owned by the Chinese government, announced at the Beijing show that it plans to be manufacturing electric vehicles in South Africa in the near future as it searches for new markets to conquer.

All conventional car makers — and even unconventional companies like Tesla — need to keep a close eye on China. In the foreseeable future, Chinese companies could come to dominate the global new car market and push the electric vehicle segment forward in a way few could have predicted even a few short years ago.

https://cleantechnica.com/2018/04/2...r-future-byd-bmw-highlight-beijing-auto-show/




Beijing Auto show highlights e-cars designed for China

Nissan officials pose for photos with the newly unveiled Sylphy Zero Emission during the start of the Auto China 2018 in Beijing, China, Wednesday, April 25, 2018. –The Associated Press

By JOE McDONALD

AP, 11:00 AM

BEIJING (AP) — Volkswagen and Nissan have unveiled electric cars designed for China at a Beijing auto show that highlights the growing importance of Chinese buyers for a technology seen as a key part of the global industry’s future.

General Motors displayed five all-electric models Wednesday including a concept Buick SUV it says can go 600 kilometers (375 miles) on one charge. Ford and other brands showed off some of the dozens of electric SUVs, sedans and other models they say are planned for China.

Auto China 2018, the industry’s biggest sales event this year, is overshadowed by mounting trade tensions between Beijing and U.S. President Donald Trump, who has threatened to hike tariffs on Chinese goods including automobiles in a dispute over technology policy.

The impact on automakers should be small, according to industry analysts, because exports amount to only a few thousand vehicles a year. Those include a GM SUV, the Envision, and Volvo Cars sedans made in China for export to the United States.

China accounted for half of last year’s global electric car sales, boosted by subsidies and other prodding from communist leaders who want to make their country a center for the emerging technology.

“The Chinese market is key for the international auto industry and it is key to our success,” VW CEO Herbert Diess said on Tuesday.

Volkswagen unveiled the E20X, an SUV that is the first model for SOL, an electric brand launched by the German automaker with a Chinese partner. The E20X, promising a 300-kilometer (185-mile) range on one charge, is aimed at the Chinese market’s bargain-priced tiers, where demand is strongest.

GM, Ford, Daimler AG’s Mercedes unit and other automakers also have announced ventures with local partners to develop models for China that deliver more range at lower prices.

On Wednesday, Nissan Motor Co. presented its Sylphy Zero Emission, which it said can go 338 kilometers (210 miles) on a charge. The Sylphy is based on Nissan’s Leaf, a version of which is available in China but has sold poorly due to its relatively high price.

Automakers say they expect electrics to account for 35 to over 50 percent of their China sales by 2025.

First-quarter sales of electrics and gasoline-electric hybrids rose 154 percent over a year earlier to 143,000 units, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers. That compares with sales of just under 200,000 for all of last year in the United States, the No. 2 market.

That trend has been propelled by the ruling Communist Party’s support for the technology. The party is shifting the financial burden to automakers with sales quotas that take effect next year and require them to earn credits by selling electrics or buy them from competitors.

That increases pressure to transform electrics into a mainstream product that competes on price and features.

Automakers also displayed dozens of gasoline-powered models from compact sedans to luxurious SUVs. Their popularity is paying for development of electrics, which aren’t expected to become profitable for most producers until sometime in the next decade.

China’s total sales of SUVs, sedans and minivans reached 24.7 million units last year, compared with 17.2 million for the United States.

SUVs are the industry’s cash cow. First-quarter sales rose 11.3 percent over a year earlier to 2.6 million, or almost 45 percent of total auto sales, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

On Wednesday, Ford displayed its Mondeo Energi plug-in hybrid, its first electric model for China, which went on sale in March. Plans call for Ford and its luxury unit, Lincoln, to release 15 new electrified vehicles by 2025.

GM plans to launch 10 electrics or hybrids in China from through 2020.

VW is due to launch 15 electrics and hybrids in the next two to three years as part of a 10 billion euro ($12 billion) development plan announced in November.

Nissan says it will roll out 20 electrified models in China over the next five years.

New but fast-growing Chinese auto trail global rivals in traditional gasoline technology but industry analysts say the top Chinese brands are catching up in electrics, a market with no entrenched leaders.

BYD Auto, the biggest global electric brand by number sold, debuted two hybrid SUVs and an electric concept car.

The company, which manufactures electric buses at a California factory and exports battery-powered taxis to Europe, also displayed nine other hybrid and plug-in electric models.

Chery Automobile Co. showed a lineup that included two electric sedans, an SUV and a hatchback, all promising 250 to 400 kilometers (150 to 250 miles) on a charge. They include futuristic features such as internet-linked navigation and smartphone-style dashboard displays.

“Our focus is not just an EV that runs. It is excellent performance,” Chery CEO Chen Anning said in an interview ahead of the show.

Electrics are likely to play a leading role as Chery develops plans announced last year to expand to Western Europe, said Chen. He said the company has yet to decide on a timeline.

Chery was China’s biggest auto exporter last year, selling 108,000 gasoline-powered vehicles abroad, though mostly in developing markets such as Russia and Egypt.

“We do have a clear intention to bring an EV product as one of our initial offerings” in Europe, Chen said.

:coffee::D

大众称正在华寻第二家电池供应商 预计超2000亿电池采购空缺

来源:经济观察网 发布时间:2018-04-27 09:35

摘要
:大众汽车集团(中国)总裁兼CEO海兹曼表示,“大众汽车第一笔电池订单已经下给了宁德时代,但未来一旦电动车在华正式量产,规模上来后,需求量会很大。所以,至少需要在本土再寻找一家新的电池供应商进行合作”。

“是的,我们正在做这件事(寻找新的电池合作伙伴),目前看来,至少需要一家新的合作伙伴”。4月24日,大众汽车集团(中国)总裁兼CEO海兹曼向经济观察网确认,大众正在中国寻找第二家电池合作商。

海兹曼表示,“大众汽车第一笔电池订单已经下给了宁德时代,但未来一旦电动车在华正式量产,规模上来后,需求量会很大。所以,至少需要在本土再寻找一家新的电池供应商进行合作”。而至于电池缺口会有多少,则要等电动车规模化生产之后才能有准确评估。

在海兹曼确认此事之前,大众汽车集团管理董事会主席、大众汽车集团CEO迪斯在当日首次接受中国媒体采访时也提到,大众目前正在为可能面临的电池产量不足的问题而寻找解决方案。“在电池方面,最大的挑战可能是需要达到足够规模的挑战。在今天(4月24日)上午的业务讨论当中,我们已经讨论了解决这个问题的不同选项,也可能会有更多的合作伙伴。”迪斯称,这个挑战不仅在中国存在,大众在全球市场都面临这个问题。

至于电池技术的开发,他表示,“目前我们自己的研发团队中有非常强大的一支队伍专注于研究电池,包括电池化学方面的研究。同时,我们和中国本土的供应商也在围绕着下一代电池开展合作。”

从2017年年底开始,大众已经启动了面向全球市场的电池采购招标,招标额高达500亿欧元。在2018年3月13日的大众集团年会上,时任大众集团CEO穆伦表示,大众集团在欧洲与中国这两大市场上已达成合作的电池采购订单金额已达200亿欧元。

而据海兹曼透露,大众在中国的第一家电池合作伙伴为宁德时代,第一批订单是针对即将在中国本土化生产的电动汽车产品。不过,据悉,大众与宁德时代的合作并非“排他性”的,这也预示着大众将在中国寻找更多的电池供应商,以缓解所有订单都来自同一家供应商所带来的风险。

在最近一个月的时间中,大众目前并没有宣布在全球范围内与任何一家电池厂达成了采购协议,这意味着在原本500亿欧元的大采购计划中,仍还有超过一半的市场空缺,该订单金额超过2000亿元人民币。目前,来自中国的天津力神正试图通过在欧洲建立工厂进入该采购体系。有欧洲媒体报道称,天津力神已经向大众方面提供了产品以供测试。

大众集团在2017年的法兰克福车展上提出了全面电动化战略“RoadmapE”,目标是到2025年,大众集团将每年生产300万辆电动汽车,旗下各品牌将推出共计80款全新电动车型,包括50款纯电动车型及30款插电式混合动力车型。最晚到2030年,大众集团旗下300余款车型均将推出至少一款电动版本。这意味着,到2025年,满足集团每年的电动汽车车队运营将需要超过150千兆瓦小时的电池容量,相当于至少四个超级电池工厂的年产量。

而至于中国,大众汽车集团RoadmapE的目标是,未来七到八年在中国推出40款国产新能源车。按照计划,2018年大众集团除了现有的8款纯电动和插电式混合动力汽车阵容外,还将推出包括3款纯电动车型在内的9款全新车型。而随着江淮大众产品即将首先落地,如何保证本土化电池的供应稳定性成为最重要的产业链保证。“到2021年,我们至少将在中国的6家工厂启动电动汽车的本土化生产”,迪斯在4月25日的大众集团媒体沟通会上表示。

而大众汽车在中国的新能源汽车即将迎来批量供应,4月24日,大众汽车集团与江淮汽车集团组建的新能源汽车合资公司推出来全新自有品牌——思皓,以及该品牌下首款A0级SUV电动车,该车预计今年9月上市销售,并且已经拿到首份数千辆的大订单。

根据思皓主攻经济性新能源车型的品牌定位来看,电池成本的控制将是很重要的一环。海兹曼在此前曾表示,大众新能源汽车的目标是实现微利,且强调任何一款电动车都应该盈利。“我们和江淮已经谈及盈利问题,肯定是要盈利的”,而对于产品上市后的首个自然年度2019年能否实现盈利的问题,海兹曼表示这要等产品真正上市后再说,“但我很乐观,”海兹曼笑着说。

@Bussard Ramjet :enjoy:
 
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Yes, put in all efforts to develop and sell electric vehicles worldwide and push out internal-combustion engines.
 
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How electric buses are hurting the oil industry

APRIL 24, 2018

electric-buses.jpg


By Jeremy Hodges

Electric buses were seen as a joke at an industry conference in Belgium seven years ago when the Chinese manufacturer BYD Co. showed an early model.

“Everyone was laughing at BYD for making a toy,” recalled Isbrand Ho, the Shenzhen-based company’s managing director in Europe. “And look now. Everyone has one.”

Suddenly, buses with battery-powered motors are a serious matter with the potential to revolutionize city transport—and add to the forces reshaping the energy industry. With China leading the way, making the traditional smog-belching diesel behemoth run on electricity is starting to eat away at fossil fuel demand.

The numbers are staggering. China had about 99 percent of the 385,000 electric buses on the roads worldwide in 2017, accounting for 17 percent of the country’s entire fleet. Every five weeks, Chinese cities add 9,500 of the zero-emissions transporters—the equivalent of London’s entire working fleet, according Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

All this is starting to make an observable reduction in fuel demand. And because they consume 30 times more fuel than average sized cars, their impact on energy use so far has become much greater than the than the passenger sedans produced companies from Tesla Inc. to Toyota Motor Corp.

Keeping It in the Ground

Cumulative global fuel displacement by e-buses and passenger EVs

For every 1,000 battery-powered buses on the road, about 500 barrels a day of diesel fuel will be displaced from the market, according to BNEF calculations. This year, the volume of fuel buses take off the market may rise 37 percent to 279,000 barrels a day, about as much oil as Greece consumes, according to BNEF.

“This segment is approaching the tipping point,” said Colin Mckerracher, head of advanced transport at the London-based research unit of Bloomberg LP. “City governments all over the world are being taken to task over poor urban air quality. This pressure isn’t going away, and electric bus sales are positioned to benefit.”

China is ahead on electrifying its fleet because it has the world’s worst pollution problem. With a growing urban population and galloping energy demand, the nation’s legendary smogs were responsible for 1.6 million extra deaths in 2015, according to non-profit Berkeley Earth.

Putting It Back

Global fuel demand displaced by e-buses

A decade ago, Shenzhen was a typical example of a booming Chinese city that had given little thought to the environment. Its smog became so notorious that the government picked it for a pilot program for energy conservation and zero emissions vehicles in 2009. Two years later, the first electric buses rolled off BYD’s production line there. And in December, all of Shenzhen’s 16,359 buses were electric.

BYD had a 13 percent of China’s electric bus market in 2016 and put 14,000 of the vehicles on the streets of Shenzhen alone. It’s built 35,000 so far and has capacity to build as many as 15,000 a year, Ho said.
BYD estimates its buses have logged 17 billion kilometers (10 billion miles) and saved 6.8 billion liters (1.8 billion gallons) of fuel since they started ferrying passengers around the world’s busiest cities. That, according to Ho, adds up to 18 million tons of carbon dioxide pollution avoided, which is about as much as 3.8 million cars produce in each year.

“The first fleet of pure electric buses provided by BYD started operation in Shenzhen in 2011,” Ho said by phone. “Now, almost 10 years later, in other cities the air quality has worsened while—compared with those cities—Shenzhen’s is much better.”

China electric bus sales

Other cities are taking notice. Paris, London, Mexico City and Los Angeles are among 13 authorities that have committed to only buying zero emissions transport by 2025.

London is slowly transforming its fleet. Currently four routes in the city center serviced by single-decker units are being shifted to electricity. There are plans to make significant investments to the clean its public transport networks, including retrofitting 5,000 old diesel buses in a program to ensure all buses are emission-free by 2037.
Transport for London, responsible for the city’s transport system, declined to comment for this article because of rules around engaging with the media ahead of May local government elections.

Those goals will have an impact on fuel consumption. London’s network draws about 1.5 million barrels a year of fuel. If the entire fleet goes electric, that may displace 430 barrels a day of diesel for each 1,000 buses going electric, reducing U.K. diesel consumption by about 0.7 percent, according to BNEF.

Across the U.K. there were 344 electric and plug-in hybrid buses in 2017, and BYD hopes to be picked to supply more. It has partnered with a Scottish bus-maker to provide the batteries for 11 new electric buses that hit the city’s roads in March.

Falkirk-based manufacturer Alexander Dennis Ltd. began making electric buses in 2016 and has quickly become the European market leader with more than 170 vehicles operating in the U.K. alone.
More work is on the horizon, with London’s transport authority planning a tender to electrify its iconic double-decker buses, Ho said.

“The tech is ready,” Ho said. “We are ready, we have our plants in China, and Alexander Dennis in Scotland is geared up for TfL. Once we’re given the word, we are ready to go.”

http://africachinapresscentre.org/2018/04/24/how-electric-buses-are-hurting-the-oil-industry/
 
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Oil has no future. It will be mainly for military usage , transport plane and marine shipping.

But once passenger transport which is the largest source for use of fossil fuel all convert to electric.

Oil will become little value.
 
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Supportive policies for China's smart car industry under way

2018-04-26 15:33

chinadaily.com.cn Editor: Li Yan

China is speeding up strategic plan, standards, traffic rules, laws and regulations on accident-incurred liabilities for its smart car industry, Economic Information Daily reported Thursday.

The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology is on its way of rolling out a directive to encourage the smart car sector and is pushing the establishment of an inter-ministry coordination mechanism and is in the process of making the strategic plan, the report said, citing unidentified sources. The next step for the ministry is to announce directives on how to integrate the smart car sector, the smart transportation sector and the telecommunication sector, according to the sources.

China will come up with its own smart car standards, traffic rules, laws and regulations relating to safety, according to the China Industry Innovation Alliance for the Intelligent and Connected Vehicles.

Li Jun, a China Academy of Engineering academician and also director of the alliance's experts' committee, said that China will also launch design guidance for smart cars, smart map architecture and standards for test grounds.

Earlier this month, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of Transport jointly released a draft regulation on road tests for smart and connected vehicles, a move widely believed to remove legal barriers for smart cars to finally hit the road.

Li said the smart car industry is able to enlarge the current car industry by 1 trillion yuan ($158.15 billion) and also able to boost fast development in 5G, internet of cars, big data, artificial intelligence and new-energy vehicles.

Research reports of Guosen Securities and Galaxy Securities said that as technologies mature and as policies and standards are being made and rolled out, there will be key opportunities along the industry chain of smart cars, which have attracted companies in the internet sector, the electronics sector and traditional auto sector.

Zhang Junyi, a partner with NIO Capital, said that the smart car is the trend for the car industry and China's auto sector will usher in a new key development stage with the improvement of infrastructure, technology, policies and laws.

http://www.ecns.cn/business/2018/04-26/300567.shtml
 
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SoftBank in Talks to Buy IPO Shares of Chinese Electric-Car Maker NIO

by The Editor | Apr 26, 2018

Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp. is in talks to purchase a large chunk of shares in the upcoming initial public offering of Chinese electric-vehicle maker NIO, according to people familiar with the matter, a move that could help bolster a multibillion-dollar valuation for the startup.

Shanghai-based NIO, an emerging rival to Tesla Inc., last December launched its first production car model—a seven-seater electric sport-utility vehicle—and has started taking customer orders for it. The company is working on a plan to list in New York in the second half of this year, people familiar with the discussions said.

SoftBank, which runs the nearly $100 billion SoftBank Vision Fund, could buy $200 million worth of shares in the IPO, one of the people said. NIO is hoping to raise between $2 billion and $3 billion from the stock sale, some of the people added. The talks with SoftBank are still ongoing and the plans could change, the people cautioned.

Representatives for SoftBank and NIO declined to comment.

NIO is planning to go public at a time of immense growth for the Chinese electric-vehicle industry. Sales of electric passenger cars in the country rose 72% to 578,000 last year, four times the number sold in the U.S. Chinese manufacturers have been supported by government subsidies and consumers are incentivized to buy electric vehicles, which produce less pollution.

NIO, founded in 2014 by Chinese entrepreneur William Li, was recently valued at $5 billion after it raised $1 billion in a November fundraising round led by Chinese internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd. Its other investors include internet search firm Baidu Inc. and Chinese investment firms Hillhouse Capital Group and Hopu Investment Management Co.

Mr. Li is also NIO’s chairman, as well as the founder of Bitauto Holdings Ltd, a New York-listed internet marketing, content and transaction-services provider for China’s auto industry.

His company is one of dozens of Chinese electric-car startups that have launched in recent years, encouraged by the government’s support for the sector. NIO also has a base in Silicon Valley, where it has been developing autonomous-driving technology and other software.

When the company in December launched its fully-electric SUV, the NIO ES8, Mr. Li presented the vehicle as a lower-priced rival to Tesla’s popular Model X. NIO’s car responds to voice commands and can run around 220 miles on a fully-charged battery.

Xiaopeng Motors, a Chinese electric-vehicle manufacturer backed by e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding
Ltd., has separately announced plans to raise more than $1 billion in funds this yea—after raising $790 million so far.

Through its funds and subsidiaries, SoftBank has been making investments across the automotive supply chain, but has yet to invest in a car maker. It owns stakes in a Canadian lithium mine, chip architecture designer Arm Holdings and ride-hailing companies including Uber Technologies Inc. and Didi Chuxing Technology Co.

SoftBank’s acquisitive founder Masayoshi Son has previously said a key part of his strategy is unlocking synergies between portfolio companies.

http://www.toptechnicalsolutions.co...ipo-shares-of-chinese-electric-car-maker-nio/
 
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SoftBank in Talks to Buy IPO Shares of Chinese Electric-Car Maker NIO

by The Editor | Apr 26, 2018

Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp. is in talks to purchase a large chunk of shares in the upcoming initial public offering of Chinese electric-vehicle maker NIO, according to people familiar with the matter, a move that could help bolster a multibillion-dollar valuation for the startup.

Shanghai-based NIO, an emerging rival to Tesla Inc., last December launched its first production car model—a seven-seater electric sport-utility vehicle—and has started taking customer orders for it. The company is working on a plan to list in New York in the second half of this year, people familiar with the discussions said.

SoftBank, which runs the nearly $100 billion SoftBank Vision Fund, could buy $200 million worth of shares in the IPO, one of the people said. NIO is hoping to raise between $2 billion and $3 billion from the stock sale, some of the people added. The talks with SoftBank are still ongoing and the plans could change, the people cautioned.

Representatives for SoftBank and NIO declined to comment.

NIO is planning to go public at a time of immense growth for the Chinese electric-vehicle industry. Sales of electric passenger cars in the country rose 72% to 578,000 last year, four times the number sold in the U.S. Chinese manufacturers have been supported by government subsidies and consumers are incentivized to buy electric vehicles, which produce less pollution.

NIO, founded in 2014 by Chinese entrepreneur William Li, was recently valued at $5 billion after it raised $1 billion in a November fundraising round led by Chinese internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd. Its other investors include internet search firm Baidu Inc. and Chinese investment firms Hillhouse Capital Group and Hopu Investment Management Co.

Mr. Li is also NIO’s chairman, as well as the founder of Bitauto Holdings Ltd, a New York-listed internet marketing, content and transaction-services provider for China’s auto industry.

His company is one of dozens of Chinese electric-car startups that have launched in recent years, encouraged by the government’s support for the sector. NIO also has a base in Silicon Valley, where it has been developing autonomous-driving technology and other software.

When the company in December launched its fully-electric SUV, the NIO ES8, Mr. Li presented the vehicle as a lower-priced rival to Tesla’s popular Model X. NIO’s car responds to voice commands and can run around 220 miles on a fully-charged battery.

Xiaopeng Motors, a Chinese electric-vehicle manufacturer backed by e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding
Ltd., has separately announced plans to raise more than $1 billion in funds this yea—after raising $790 million so far.

Through its funds and subsidiaries, SoftBank has been making investments across the automotive supply chain, but has yet to invest in a car maker. It owns stakes in a Canadian lithium mine, chip architecture designer Arm Holdings and ride-hailing companies including Uber Technologies Inc. and Didi Chuxing Technology Co.

SoftBank’s acquisitive founder Masayoshi Son has previously said a key part of his strategy is unlocking synergies between portfolio companies.

http://www.toptechnicalsolutions.co...ipo-shares-of-chinese-electric-car-maker-nio/

This is not a concept. New models soon to be unveiled. :lol:

upload_2018-4-27_17-8-16.png


upload_2018-4-27_17-10-2.png


upload_2018-4-27_17-10-29.png


upload_2018-4-27_17-10-42.png


Gotta have one. But expensive a little for me :cry: 550.000 Yuan.
 
. .
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BYD rolls out stellar lineup at Beijing auto show
By Zhang Rui
China.org.cn, April 27, 2018

New energy technology company BYD unveiled new cars and other products at its "Shaping Manufacturing for a Smart Future" showing at China's most prestigious auto expo this year.

e188f8d7-8d48-4ff3-afac-9561303003f5.jpg

Wang Chuanfu, president and chairman of BYD (middle), Wolfgang Egger, design director of BYD (right), and Zhao Changjiang, general manager of BYD Auto Sales (left) pose for a photo at the 2018 Beijing International Automotive Exhibition, April 25, 2018. [Photo courtesy of BYD]
BYD introduced its biggest showing ever on Wednesday, including the New Generation of Tang, Qin Pro – its pure electric concept car the E-SEED – the intelligent connected system "DiLink" and the "e Platform" at the 2018 Beijing International Automotive Exhibition. In addition, BYD also debuted a new member of the Dynasty series, Song MAX DM and Yuan EV 360, among other popular passenger vehicle models.

"The auto industry is undergoing a revolution which has never happened before. Internationalization, electrification and intelligent connection have evolved from just ideas to reality," said Wang Chuanfu, president and chairman of BYD. "We are at this historical turning point where BYD is stepping into the new era of automotive manufacturing with the world's leading intelligent connected system DiLink and the e Platform which DiLink is a part of. BYD is reshaping the way of transportation."

Developers will be able to contribute to the enhancement of DiLink as technology, as its 341 sensors and 66 control limits will be an open platform, something that has never happened before in the world. BYD also unveiled its pure electric 4 wheel-drive E-SEED, which boasts a new DUAL BLADE design concept. It is capable of travelling 600 kilometers on a single charge and accelerates from 0-100 kilometers in 3.9 seconds.

BYD has invested heavily in research and development and recruited top engineering and design talent as it pushes ahead into overseas markets. Over the past two years, BYD has hired former executives from renowned German automakers to oversee its transformation, including Wolfgang Egger, who currently heads its design department, and Heinz Keck, a tuning suspension and steering systems expert. Egger designed the Dragon Face concept car, which the new Qin Pro is based on. It is expected to be commercially available in 2019.

Since its founding as a rechargeable battery manufacturer in 1995, BYD has gradually evolved its business into a maker of electric vehicles for private, public and industrial use. The company has also invested heavily in battery technology and solar panels, thereby creating a full set of new energy products.

BYD will continue its overseas expansion, bringing its expertise in electric vehicles to cities ranging from Singapore to London. BYD is now present in more than 200 cities in 50 countries and regions and was the number one seller of new energy vehicles in the world between 2015 and 2017.

***

Go for ES6 possibly priced between 200k-300k Yuan. :-)

http://news.bitauto.com/hao/wenzhang/754805

ES6 pictures do not show up. Company website also does not mention.

But, as the article says and you point out, it will be priced cheaper. Like you say, probably slightly over 300k.

And it will be a 5-seater, perhaps dimensions are smaller.

Can't wait to see it.
 
.
The BYD EV300 costs more than the Tesla Model 3 and yet has inferior acceleration, horsepower, and top speed. It's not a bad start for BYD's foray into the EV market, suffice it to say that Chinese brands have a long, long way to go before matching what many American & European companies have been doing for years.
 
.
Will China sell or launch them, in Pakistani Market ?

China must sell Haval SUVS ,Trucks ,Luxury Cars in Pakistan & Bangladesh .
Who are both Sunni Muslim Countries .

Who dont like to purchase USA or Western Controlled Automobile/ Car MNCs.
Many practice BDS of West ,India & Israhell.

But they dont have any other options but these companies .
& their accomplices like Japan ,France ,India, & Korea etc

Who are all onwed by Western Countries .

Muslim countries are looking for an alternative ,
Who isnt a puppet or accomplice of West .

& there is only one Option , That is China.

I hope China launches CAR's & Automobiles , Heavy Industries , Trucks ,Buses
in Muslim countries like ,Pakistan ,Bangladesh, Egypt ,KSA ,Indonesia, Turkey , Iran , to counter Western Influence .
 
. .
Will China sell or launch them, in Pakistani Market ?

China must sell Haval SUVS ,Trucks ,Luxury Cars in Pakistan & Bangladesh .
Who are both Sunni Muslim Countries .

Who dont like to purchase USA or Western Controlled Automobile/ Car MNCs.
Many practice BDS of West ,India & Israhell.

But they dont have any other options but these companies .
& their accomplices like Japan ,France ,India, & Korea etc

Who are all onwed by Western Countries .

Muslim countries are looking for an alternative ,
Who isnt a puppet or accomplice of West .

& there is only one Option , That is China.

I hope China launches CAR's & Automobiles , Heavy Industries , Trucks ,Buses
in Muslim countries like ,Pakistan ,Bangladesh, Egypt ,KSA ,Indonesia, Turkey , Iran , to counter Western Influence .


@TaiShang @cirr @beijingwalker @Chinese-Dragon @Dragon Emperor
What do you think ?
 
.

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