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China's New Energy Vehicle Surging

Shenzhen is said to replace all traditional buses by electric buses by the end of 2017.


That's fast! Yes it's irreversible trend that all urban buses in China will go fully green (electric, LNG and other new energy), many cities are progressing fast in this direction. Cities with ample financial resources, compete grid of charging stations, will achieve the goal first.
 
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As US lags, China, Europe drive shift to electric vehicles
Source: Reuters-Global Times Published: 2017/1/16

Charging forward

At the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, which will end till Sunday, a company executive referred to the ongoing switch from gasoline to electric vehicles as "an irreversible trend." It's true that electric vehicle sales have been picking up in many of the biggest auto markets around the world - just not in North America. In the US, registrations for plug-in vehicles fell in 2015 and again in 2016, as low fuel prices aided sales of gas-guzzling vehicles. However, the European and Chinese markets are picking up the slack, with China in particular expected to make a hard push to meet electric vehicle sales goals by the end of the decade.


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In November 2016, an electric car sits in an underground parking garage equipped with charging stations. Photo: CFP

Electric cars will pick up critical momentum in 2017, many in the auto industry believe - just not in North America.

Tighter emissions rules in China and Europe leave global carmakers and some consumers with little choice but to embrace plug-in vehicles, fueling an investment surge, said industry executives gathered in Detroit, Michigan, in the US from January 9 to 13 for the North American International Auto Show, the city's annual auto show. The auto show will end till Sunday.

"Car electrification is an irreversible trend," said Jacques Aschenbroich, chief executive of auto supplier Valeo, which has expanded sales by 50 percent in five years with a focus on electric, hybrid, connected and self-driving cars.

In Europe, green cars benefit increasingly from subsidies, tax breaks and other perks, while combustion engines face mounting penalties including restrictions on driving and parking.

China, struggling with catastrophic pollution levels in major cities, is aggressively pushing plug-in vehicles. Its carrot-and-stick approach combines tens of billions in investment and research funding with subsidies, and regulations designed to discourage driving fossil-fueled vehicles in large cities.

The road ahead for electric vehicles (EVs) in the US, however, could have more hairpin curves.

Regulators in California and a group of other US states are pushing ahead with state-level rules mandating rising quotas for electric, or "zero emission" vehicles.

But plug-in registrations in the US fell in 2015, and the market share of electric-only vehicles declined further to 0.37 percent in 2016, as cheap fuel drove demand for gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles (SUV) and pickup trucks.

President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to roll back environmental and climate rules. Groups representing established automakers asked Trump to review Obama administration fuel economy targets out to 2025, even before the outgoing administration formally signed them into effect on Friday.

Automakers have also asked Trump to work toward a single, national set of rules to govern automotive greenhouse gas emissions, a move that could spark legal challenges to electric car quotas in California and other states on grounds they present a separate standard.

'Going electric'

Still, industry executives in Detroit said hitting the brakes on electric vehicles in the US would not relieve the pressure to bring them to market, because China and Europe are forging ahead with policies to expand sales of plug-in cars.

That is why Ford is moving forward with previously announced plans to invest $4.5 billion for plug-in vehicles by 2020, Chief Executive Mark Fields said earlier in January 2017.

"The industry is changing; the infrastructure's starting to build, and that's why our view is that within the next 15 years we'll see more electrified offerings … than we'll see gasoline-powered," Fields said as he unveiled a $700 million plan to build a battery SUV and other plug-in vehicles in Flat Rock, Michigan.

To drive the shift to electric, industry executives said they needed more help from governments.

In China, Europe and the US, automakers are advocating new infrastructure money go to public electric car charging networks.

In the US, EV manufacturers are pushing for the continuation of a $7,500 federal tax subsidy for consumers who buy a fully electric car. Even if Trump were to try to eliminate it, it would take time as Congress would have to act.

"There is not a disagreement that the world is going electric," California Air Resources Board Chair Mary Nichols said on the sidelines of the auto show, noting that all vehicle makers were now investing in electric models across their entire product lines. The debate, she said, was "over timing, not the goal."

The Chinese electric car market cast its shadow over the Detroit auto show, where manufacturers showed off plug-in hybrid and electric models that will likely do scant business in the US market.

IHS Automotive predicts Chinese plug-in deliveries will hit 1 million in 2019, four years before the US. China pulled ahead in 2015 with a four-fold sales surge before adding 55 percent in 2016 to 348,000 vehicles, with the US at 138,000.

"Look to China rather than the US for the future of electric cars," Gerard Detourbet, a Renault-Nissan executive leading low-cost plug-in development, said recently. "China is compelled to act - that's the main difference."
 
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A Chinese battery maker is muscling into the EV scene
Contemporary Amperex Technology Ltd. has already overtaken LG Chem production.
Jan 17th 2017 at 3:03PM

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By now, you're well aware of the big players in the battery-making business. LG Chem and Samsung are both expanding manufacturing to Europe to be closer to their EV-building customers. BYD is making batteries for its EVs and for stationary energy storage. With the help of Panasonic, Tesla has launched its own battery business, and has big, big plans for Gigafactory 1 in Nevada. We won't fault you if you haven't heard of China's Contemporary Amperex Technology Ltd (CATL). You might want to start paying attention, though.

According to Reuters, CATL is making huge inroads into the EV battery market. Based in Ningde, China, the company tripled its lithium-ion battery production last year, and quadrupled its value to $11.5 billion in an October funding round. LG Chem has already fallen behind CATL's EV battery production, with Panasonic and BYD in its sights. By 2020, CATL plans to increase output to 50 GWh, which is the same figure Tesla is shooting for at its Gigafactory by the end of its current construction phase.

With an EV boom in China, business is good. "We continue to walk where the country guides us," says CATL CEO Huang Shilin. "We hope by 2020 we can achieve performance and price that lead the world." To that end, CATL – which lists BMW as a customer – plans to build a factory in Europe, and has opened offices in France, Germany, and Sweden.

And the aforementioned "guidance" from its own country is certainly helpful. China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology could force smaller battery manufacturers to merge or quit the business by increasing minimum production requirements to 8 GWh. That would keep CATL and BYD in the clear, but not many others. China has also picked CATL as a nominee for $15 million in incentives if it meets goals to reduce battery costs by half and increase energy density by two-thirds by 2020. As such, research and development is a top priority, which should also help CATL keep pace in a quickly evolving field.

As China continues its own push to become a global leader in what it calls new energy vehicles, the country's battery business is growing. Caught in the groundswell, CATL just happens to be in the right place at the right time to become a leader as well.

http://www.autoblog.com/2017/01/17/catl-china-ev-battery-manufacturer/
 
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China EV Startup Future Mobility to Build $1.7 Billion Factory

Bloomberg News
19 มกราคม 2560 16:29 GMT+7 20 มกราคม 2560 05:00 GMT+7
  • Company will build the plant in eastern city of Nanjing
  • Plans to produce and start selling first model by 2020
Future Mobility Corp., the electric-car maker that counts former executives at BMW AG and Nissan Motor Co. among its founding shareholders, will spend 11.6 billion yuan ($1.7 billion) to build a factory in China, moving a step closer to the startup’s goal of selling its first model by 2020.

The company signed the deal with the city of Nanjing in eastern China on Thursday to build a factory, Daniel Kirchert, chief operating officer and co-founder of Future Mobility, said in a telephone interview. The factory will have an initial capacity of 150,000 units a year and subsequently double in output, he said, without providing a timeframe.

Startups in China have raised billions in funds to build factories for electric vehicles as demand surged following a push by the government to encourage their development. The government has identified new-energy vehicles as a strategic emerging industry and is issuing production licenses to newcomers to encourage innovation and competition.

Future Mobility is also talking to industry regulators about applying for a production license, said Kirchert. Eight companies including Wanxiang Group, Minth Group and Jiangling Motors Corp. have obtained the go-ahead from the National Development and Reform Commission.

Local governments in China are competing to host electric vehicle manufacturers, in some instances giving incentives like free land and multiyear tax holidays, and helping with their application for permits from the central government.

While Future Mobility has landed in Nanjing, LeEco will build a plant in Zhejiang province and Beijing CH-Auto Technology Co. has chosen eastern city of Suzhou for its manufacturing base.

The debut model from Future Mobility, which completed its first round of funding last month, will be a mid-sized electric SUV priced around 300,000 yuan, Kirchert said.

— With assistance by Tian Ying
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-future-mobility-to-build-1-7-billion-factory
 
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China Expected To Account For 40% Of Worldwide Production Of New Energy Vehicles In 2016
1 day ago by Eric Loveday

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BYD Song PHEV

China closed out the year producing nearly 500,000 new energy vehicles (electric vehicles) for the whole of 2016 (while the country sold just over 351,00 of them as passenger EVs) . That figure is estimated to account for some 40% of the worldwide production total for new energy vehicles in 2016.

As Yicai Global reports:

“China’s new energy vehicle production is expected to account for 40 percent of the world’s total this year, according to Xu Yanhua, a deputy secretary general of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.”

Production of new energy vehicles in China has risen sharply as of late with some 84,000 made in November 2016 alone. That’s up 44.3% over last November and it brings the January-November total to an estimated 402,800 new energy vehicles produced in China.

Xu Yanhua, deputy secretary general of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, stated:

“The continued rise in output and sales of new energy vehicles suggests across-the-board progress throughout the entire industry.”

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BYD plug-in electric car sales in China – November 2016
One of the leading new energy vehicle automakers in China is BYD who’s seen sales rise sharply (almost untraceable volume in late 2013 to 10,000 or so in some months of 2016) over the past few years (see chart).

http://insideevs.com/china-expected...de-production-of-new-energy-vehicles-in-2016/
 
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We should build some of those electric ones, considering the lack of emission regulations in this country.
 
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Electric is the future of automotive world. Even BMW M devision announced "all future M cars would be electric progressively"
 
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From what I can tell, China will dominate the new energy vehicle sector in the near future.
This is due to the size of the market, favorable government policies and most importantly the size of the industrial eco-system. China is also getting more innovative by the day, judging from the WIPO statistics. I don't think any country has the economy of scale to compete with China's integrated manufacturing prowess. This is the harsh reality.

In the electric car segment, there will be a strong competitor in Tesla and maybe the European car companies.

In the electric bus sector, China has completely dominated this sector. The big Chinese electric bus companies are just competing among themselves.
 
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From what I can tell, China will dominate the new energy vehicle sector in the near future.
This is due to the size of the market, favorable government policies and most importantly the size of the industrial eco-system. China is also getting more innovative by the day, judging from the WIPO statistics. I don't think any country has the economy of scale to compete with China's integrated manufacturing prowess. This is the harsh reality.

In the electric car segment, there will be a strong competitor in Tesla and maybe the European car companies.

In the electric bus sector, China has completely dominated this sector. The big Chinese electric bus companies are just competing among themselves.

Luckily the Chinese government sees the strategic importance of promoting New Energy Vehicles.

The recent collapse in oil prices should give us a lot of breathing room in this regard.
 
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China To Add 800,000 Charging Points To Support Booming NEV Market

Tycho De Feijter , CONTRIBUTOR
I write about the Chinese car market.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.

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Chargers stand at a State Grid Corp. of China charging station in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, China, on Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2016. Taiyuan became the first city to replace its entire fleet of taxis with electric vehicles. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

China is going to build 800,000 new charging points this year in support of the booming new energy vehicle (NEV) market. The figure includes 100,000 public chargers and 700,000 non-public chargers. The latter category consists mainly of company-charging points, and charging points for taxi's, buses and commercial vehicles.

In 2016, China also added 100,000 public charging points, and it has a total of about 150,000 public charging points right now.

The new points will mainly be installed in cities and on highways. China's National Energy Administration (NEA) claims that in Beijing and Shanghai there is always a charging facility within a radius of five kilometers and that 14,000 kilometers of highway have access to fast-charging stations.

The pace of construction will continue to at least 2020 when China wants to have enough charging capacity to support a fleet of five million electric vehicles.

New Energy Vehicles include electric vehicles (EV) and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV). Last year 507,000 NEVs were sold in China and this year the country targets 800,000 units.

The 2017 sales number consists of 350,000 passenger cars, the rest is made up of buses and various commercial vehicles - this part of the NEV boom in China goes largely unnoticed but its growth is expected to surpass NEV passenger cars.

Big cities like Beijing and Shanghai are adding electric and plug-in hybrid buses to their fleets in record numbers, and many city-based transport companies are going electric as well, using vehicles ranging from tricycles, minivans to mid-sized trucks.

The lack of charging points has long been hindering NEV sales in China. Even when the government started handing out generous NEV subsidies some five years ago they somehow neglected this problem. In late 2015, there were only 30,000 charging points in China. It was only in early 2016 that the government got serious about charging, and they seem almost fanatic now, setting the stage for a new phase of the NEV revolution.


Tycho de Feijter is a Beijing-based China analyst, specialized in cars and tanks. He is the founder of CarNewsChina.com, the largest portal for news and information about the Chinese auto industry.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/tychode...s-to-support-booming-nev-market/#6022fc032151
 
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Tsinghua-Chinese Gold Group unveil research institute in Henan
(People's Daily Online) 20:56, February 23, 2017

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Chinese Gold Group (CGG) on Feb. 23 unveiled the foundation of a new energy automobile research and development institute in central China’s Henan province, which marked a strategic cooperation project between CGG and Tsinghua University on new energy.

The institute was located in Tongxu county of Henan. Heads of the CGG, local authorities and the dean of the institute attended an unveiling ceremony on Feb. 23.

Chen Junyan, president of CGG, noted at the ceremony that new energy automobile is crucial for environment. “It is an industry for the next generation,” he said.

In 2016, Chinese Gold Group and Tsinghua university reached a strategic cooperation,starting a joint research and development of pure electric vehicles, whose cruising distance has reached 500 kilometers. The core technology has reached the leading level of the world.

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Volvo’s first electric car will be built in China
Viknesh Vijayenthiran
Apr 19, 2017

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Volvo CMA modular compact car platform in electric configuration


Compact Modular Architecture designed for smaller cars and offer a range of 250 miles or more. The battery will be placed in the vehicle floor and an electric motor will be at the front axle.

At the 2017 Shanghai auto show on Wednesday, Volvo confirmed that the car will be built at a plant in China. Volvo will sell it globally, including in the United States where it is expected to cost between $35,000 and $40,000.

Volvo has three car plants in China: in Daqing, which makes its 90 series cars; Chengdu, which makes its 60 series cars; and Luqiao, which will make its 40 series cars and most likely the new electric car.

Volvo already exports the S60 Inscription to the U.S. from the Chengdu plant and soon the automaker will export S90 sedans here from the Daqing plant.

The decision to make its first electric car in China highlights the important role the country is playing in Volvo’s electrified future. China is already the biggest market for electric cars and demand there is expected to experience significant growth due to generous subsidies as part of the government’s attempts to reduce air pollution.

For more from the Shanghai auto show, head to our dedicated hub.


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Volvo is owned by the Chinese car company, Geely.
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Chinese electric cars set to make waves at Shanghai Motor Show

Almost every car brand is showing at least one electric concept vehicle at the upcoming Shanghai Motor Show

BY REUTERS
19 APR 2017

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China’s auto industry is charging ahead with aggressive plans to electrify cars even as policymakers scale back subsidies aimed at building sales from relatively low levels and consider tapping the brakes on sales quotas for plug-in cars.

Industry executives will use the Shanghai Motor Show, which opens to the public on Friday, to show off numerous battery electric and plug-in hybrid models. But behind the scenes, many are worried that batteries capable of delivering the same driving range as gasoline cars are still too expensive.


While green energy car sales have risen dramatically on the back of government policies, making China the world’s leading market in this segment, electric cars have otherwise generated little consumer interest. They make up less than 2 per cent of China’s overall auto market of 28 million vehicles sold last year.

The dominant players in China’s electric vehicle market are local, including state-owned Beijing Automotive Group, and Warren Buffett-backed BYD. Most cars are relatively cheap with limited range.

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An electric vehicle charging station in Beijing. Automakers face a conflict in China's huge but crowded market: Regulators are pushing them to sell electric cars, but buyers want gasoline-hungry SUVs. Photo: AP

Beijing’s central government has floated proposals to require automakers to substantially boost sales of so-called “new energy vehicles” (NEVs), or risk being penalised. But at the same time, it is cutting subsidies on green cars by a fifth this year, a move that could deepen manufacturers’ losses on such models and discourage consumers from buying them.

Policymakers say reducing subsidies gradually to 2020 will wean automakers off government support and create a self-sustained market for electric vehicles. Industry officials and experts reckon tightening fuel efficiency regulations through 2020 will compel car makers to rely more on electrification to boost average fuel efficiency despite the drop-off in subsidies.

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People work at the assembly workshop at the BYD factory in Lancaster, in the United States. As the world's largest manufacturer of rechargeable batteries and electric vehicles, the Chinese company established its factory in Lancaster, California in 2013. Photo: Xinhua

ACT NOW

Industry executives say long term, they expect China will insist on more electric vehicles, and to be ready, they must invest in developing those vehicles now.

“We’re not holding back anything. The requirements whether they get changed or adjusted or whatever, the bottom line is clear that electrification is going to play a bigger and bigger role ... in China and other markets as well,” Ford Motor Co CEO Mark Fields told reporters at a pre-show event this month.

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A hybrid police car is seen at the unveiling of two new Ford Fusion hybrid pursuit-rated Police Responder cars at Los Angeles Police Department headquarters. Photo: AFP

Industry executives expect Beijing to ask automakers operating in China ultimately to generate green car credits equivalent to 12 percent of annual sales volume with NEVs by around 2020, with each green vehicle getting a different number of credits depending on the level of electrification and driving range.

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The Citroen C5 Aircross concept car is presented during an event ahead of the 17th Shanghai International Automobile Industry Exhibition in Shanghai. Photo: AFP

Automakers and government officials have been bargaining over China’s electric vehicle policy for years.

In the latest draft policy released in September, Beijing proposed a requirement that they generate credits equivalent to 8 per cent of automakers’ sales next year by selling battery electric or plug-in hybrid vehicles, rising to 10 per cent in 2019 and 12 per cent in 2020. More recently, the government has indicated that timetable could slip.

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The GLM Co. Tommykaira ZZ EV electric sports car, right, and the chassis and drive system of the Tommykaira ZZ. GLM, the Kyoto-based automaker, is planning to sell the G4 concept electric vehicle (EV) with a price of US$367,000 in 2019. Photo: Bloomberg

Whatever target the government sets, automakers would have little choice but to comply. China is the world’s biggest auto market by far, and growth is set to continue this year, albeit at a slower 5 per cent, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

That is why even as automakers fight electric vehicle mandates in the United States, they are scrambling to develop more plug-in electric hybrids and electric battery cars for China.

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The Buick Velite 5, an extended range electric hybrid, on display at a global launch event ahead of the Shanghai Auto 2017 show. Photo: AP

NEW MODELS

Ford, for example, says that by 2018 it will launch in China a plug-in hybrid sedan called the Mondeo Energi, a version of the low-volume Ford Fusion Energi offered in the United States. It also plans to bring an all-electric sport-utility vehicle to China over the next five years.

General Motors Co, one of the largest automakers in the Chinese market, plans to launch at least 10 NEVs by 2020. To support the growth of its NEV line-up, GM has built a battery assembly plant in Shanghai which should be ready to deliver battery packs next year.

Volkswagen plans to have 13 additional NEVs by 2020 based on its current generation of technology, following on plug-in hybrid versions of the Phideon sedan, due to be unveiled later on Tuesday, and the Audi A6L sedan. The VW brand aims to further launch 10 electric vehicles between 2020 and 2025.

The German manufacturer also hopes to form a joint venture just for NEVs with Anhui Jianghuai Automobile Group (JAC) , and any models from that partnership would be on top of those plans, a spokesman told Reuters. VW said in January the first VW-JAC car could be produced next year.

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A worker assembles an e-Golf electric car at the production line in Germany. Photo: REUTERS

China’s drive for electric vehicles, driven in part to combat often suffocating urban smog, has put pressure on Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp to re-think its earlier scepticism about battery-electric technology. Toyota has said it will locally build plug-in hybrids and sell them in China, starting in 2018, although it has not said when all-electric car models would hit Chinese showrooms.

To be sure, even as automakers renew commitments to produce more NEVs, it’s not clear how aggressively they would push those cars in the marketplace.

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A Toyota Motor Corp. Mirai fuel-cell vehicle (FCV) at the automaker's event on the sidelines of the Shanghai Auto Show. Toyota is bringing its Mirai fuel-cell vehicle to China as it strives to protect its lead in the technology amid challenges from Hyundai Motor Co. and Honda Motor Co. Photo: Bloomberg

“All automakers in China are still trying to understand the implications of the more stringent fuel efficiency regulations and whether to increase production of qualifying NEVs or purchase NEV credits from other automakers, including their partners,” said James Chao, Shanghai-based Asia-Pacific chief of consulting firm IHS Markit Automotive.
 
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I know it's about civilian application, but may I ask did China has application of this new energy vehicles concept for military?
 
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