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Milestone: China makes history and becomes the world top car exporter, surpassing Japan in Q1 2023

仰望U8預售109.8萬,1分鐘售出13000輛​

Best seller in current Shanghai Auto show, BYD U8 SUV, 1.10 million¥ ( $166,600 ), sold 13,000 units in just one minute.

BYD Yangwang U8 AWD EV SUV With 1,100HP


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58 percent of Chinese car brands are less than 10 years old

The world's largest car market has almost 100 brands belonging to 40 automotive groups.

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22 April 2023 at 10:27
Juan Felipe Munoz
By: Juan Felipe Munoz
Published by: Juan Felipe Munoz


In the immediate aftermath of the 2008-2011 financial crisis and the European economic recession between 2010 and 2013, the automotive industry saw a considerable number of brands go out of business.

The crisis has had a direct impact on sales and has made the markets smaller in terms of volume. As the strong growth seen in the late 1990s and early 2000s faded, many automakers were forced to get rid of their weaker car brands.

GM's Slimming Cure

General Motors is probably the manufacturer that has suffered the most. In the late 1990s, this portfolio included nine different brands. Today there are just four left. Chrysler and Ford have also dropped some of their brands in the last 20 years: Plymouth, Eagle, and Mercury to name a few. In Europe, brands such as Rover and Saab have disappeared, while others like Lancia have been relegated to a single model.

Meanwhile in China, the situation is practically the opposite. In the early years of this century, the Chinese market featured about 25 brands. At the time, the Asian country mainly produced imitations of old European and Japanese cars that were sold locally in a still small market. Between 2001 and 2010, 14 other car brands arrived.

China was becoming a safe haven not only for domestic manufacturers but also for Western brands grappling with the economic crisis. As of 2008, China's auto industry is the largest in the world in terms of automobile production. Since then, the growth has been exponential.

Baby-Brands From China

As demand continues to grow and Chinese consumers' income increases, the industry has started to introduce more models with new brands. Between 2011 and 2015, a total of 12 new brands hit the local market: Maxus, Beijing Auto, VGV, Haval, Xpeng, Nio, Cowin (currently Kaiyi), Hozon, Leap Motor, Weltmeister, Enovate, and Li Auto.

The arrival of the electric vehicle and its consequent popularity, together with the strong commitment of the central government for its right positioning, has favoured the emergence of even more brands than in the previous period considered.

Between 2016 and today, there are upwards of 50 new car companies in the region, allowing Chinese consumers to choose from a total of 99 different brands. And as such, the Chinese auto manufacturing sector is both large and very young: 58 percent are less than 10 years old.

Much of this exponential growth of brands can be explained by the interest of local automotive groups in being recognised as innovative and in line with the EV boom.

China, The Largest Auto Market In The World

China is the largest light vehicle market in the world, with about 25 million units sold annually. Last year it accounted for almost 32 percent of global auto sales, or the equivalent of the combined deliveries of the US, India, Japan, and Germany.

Therefore, there are plenty of opportunities for everyone. For this reason, the strategy, as was the case for the American market in the '70s and '80s, is to expand the offer by introducing more shared models with different brands and positioning. The 99 brands available today are collected into around 40 automotive groups. However, not all are successful. In recent years, some brands have been dropped due to low sales.

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The dynamics of the Chinese auto market are unique. Massive local demand, strong government support, and commitment to electric vehicle development are the perfect scenario for the introduction of new brands. Six brands have been introduced this year alone, and three more are expected to hit the roads by December.

Europe, the United States, Japan, and Korea cannot tell the same story. In reality, in the last eight years, only a few brands have been introduced or revived: Alpine, Polestar, Cupra, Jetta, Genesis, RAM, and DS.

 
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Chinese EV dominance hastens end of petrol engine era

By AFP - April 22, 2023 @ 5:32pm

People wait in a line to visit the Porsche booth during the 20th Shanghai International Automobile Industry Exhibition in Shanghai. - AFP PIC


People wait in a line to visit the Porsche booth during the 20th Shanghai International Automobile Industry Exhibition in Shanghai. - AFP PIC

SHANGHAI: This year's Shanghai Auto Show signalled the end of the petrol engine era in China, as domestic electric vehicle brands drive change across the sector and leave foreign companies in the dust, analysts and industry insiders said.

Government support for EVs and growing interest from a vast consumer base has assured Chinese companies' dominance of their home market, the world's largest – and they are now beginning to set their sights overseas.

Shanghai has shown Chinese brands "can compete with all of the legacy automakers in every way – performance, quality, comfort, there's nothing they can't do", said EV specialist Elliot Richards, joking he had seen "a lot of worried-looking German men wandering around.

"I think this show marks the end of the internal combustion engine and the beginning of the EV era," he added.


EV companies are well aware they are closing in on their fossil-fuelled predecessors.

"We regard high-end petrol vehicles such as BMW, Mercedes Benz and Audi as our main competitors," William Li, CEO of the "Chinese Tesla" Nio, told AFP.

According to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, electric vehicles made up a quarter of car sales in the country in 2022, a year-on-year increase of 94 percent.

Despite a downturn across the global auto sector, Li said he thought EVs' market share in China could increase to over 40 percent this year.

In Shanghai, dozens of new models were on display from new and legacy carmakers alike.

"The future is very much here now," Mike Johnstone, a top executive at British luxury brand Lotus, told AFP.

"There's a lot of proliferation of electrified products (in China), and it's changing the entire market."

China has dedicated huge resources to the industry.

"They skipped developing petrol engines because they can't compete with the rest of the world," said Richards.

"So they thought: '(With EVs) we can get a head start in front of everyone else'."

The country began investing heavily in associated technology from the early 2000s.

"It's ingrained in the nature of the country's economic system: the Chinese government is very good at focusing resources on the industries it wants to grow," Zeyi Yang wrote in MIT Technology Review.

Central and local authorities poured billions of dollars into subsidies and tax breaks, and allocated public transport contracts to EV companies.

The supporting infrastructure was built too – the government says there are now more than 5.8 million charging piles in China.

Guangdong province alone has around three times as many public chargers as the whole of the United States, according to Bloomberg data.

"In general, there are still a lot of preferential policies... for the production and sale of electric vehicles," said Nio's Li, using as an example the waiving of expensive licence plate fees in some cities.

Those policies have applied to foreign brands too.

That tactic helped lure industry leader Tesla to Chinese shores, bolstering the sector's reputation and sparking further competition.

Nowadays, more than 94 brands offer over 300 models in the Chinese market, "the most vibrant globally", according to Counterpoint Research.

Some are smashing the cash barrier that put EVs beyond the means of the average consumer.

In Shanghai, China's Geely exhibited its boxy Panda Mini – including a bright yellow one with the phrase "what the duck" emblazoned on its side.

The cheaper versions cost around $5,800.

In the future, homegrown technology could drive prices down even further.

Battery giant CATL has developed a cell that uses sodium instead of lithium ions, the former both more abundant and cheaper than the latter.

Just before the show opened CATL announced those batteries would be incorporated into domestic brand Chery's cars.

All this is being watched closely by foreign competitors.

Brands within the Chinese market are "setting the benchmark now" for others, Lotus' Johnstone said.

And Chinese EV companies have already begun to make inroads abroad.

The biggest of them, BYD, set up shop in Norway then expanded onwards, and others are following.

Geely-owned Zeekr's Europe CEO, Spiros Fotinos, told AFP the technological sophistication of Chinese-made EVs is combatting old stereotypes around quality that foreign consumers might harbour.

"Consumers are seeing a lot of innovative safety technologies, with driver assist systems that are really cutting edge," he said.

Richards though said Chinese automakers' success in the West wasn't "a done deal", as they would have to adapt to the market.

"Karaoke machines in cars, for example – very popular in China, not so popular in Europe," he said.

Johnstone insisted carmakers with "heritage and history" that welcomed in the electric era would remain competitive.

"Brands that have been around for a number of years... will continue to live in the future as well," he said. --REUTERS

 
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You pathetic sanghi who consider yourself as a HYPERPOWER OF THE UNIVERSE but you're the garbage country in front of China
now why you saying like this in so bad and rude way ?

simply, I asking the very of the simple question

about Chinese auto exports destinateon countrys.
 
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If Europe and Japan lose China's car market and can't be able to export cars to China, what else they can still sell to China..?

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If Europe and Japan lose China's car market and can't be able to export cars to China, what else they can still sell to China..?

View attachment 926432
Intellectual property and innovation, something japanese and Chinese were never able to achieve before their factory workers died off, well the world as in the past will build new factories with cheap slaves in another part of asia.
 
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