http://www.plugincars.com/china-looks-global-evs-its-local-compliance-cars-128997.html
China Looks to Global EVs for Its Local Electric Compliance Cars
By Alysha Webb · November 27, 2013

[images  
http://www.plugincars.com/sites/default/files/venucia-e-concept-620.jpg
Chinese version of Nissan LEAF - It's a Nissan LEAF, but re-badged with the
Chinese Venucia brand

http://www.plugincars.com/sites/default/files/zinoro-ev-620.jpg
A BMW EV, but with the Zinoro brand
]

Familiar-looking plug-in electric vehicles may be seen on roads in China in
the next few years. Among the vehicles on display at the recent Guangzhou
Auto Show in southern China were a Chinese version of the Nissan LEAF and an
electric version of the BMW X1. Both were produced via the foreign
automakers’ joint ventures in China. Also the latest iteration of the Denza
pure electric vehicle, produced at the Daimler-BYD joint venture, was on
display.

Does this mean foreign automakers believe China will be a hotbed for
electric vehicle sales? Probably not. These vehicles are more likely
“compliance cars,” produced to please the Chinese government, which is
promoting vehicle electrification in China. Producing the cars domestically
through a joint venture will qualify the vehicles for government subsidies.

“It seems the strategy in play is to leverage the JV brand mandate to add
foreign EV technology to the market,” Bill Russo, president of consultancy
Synergistics Ltd. told PluginCars.com. “This helps the Chinese access the
foreign EV technology while the foreign player has a way to access the EV
subsidies with a local brand.”

China has been pursuing electrification for more than a decade, and has
released a series of plans that set target production and sales goals and
subsidies for purchase of electric vehicles. The most recent plan, which
covers 2013-2015, was released a few months ago.

Only Via Joint Efforts

In that plan, battery electric passenger cars are eligible for incentives of
up to 60,000 RMB or $9,848 at current exchange rates. Buyers of plug-in
hybrid electric passenger vehicles can receive up to 35,000 RMB or $4,103 in
2013. Those amounts will decrease by 10 percent in 2014, and by 20 percent
in 2015. To be eligible to receive those subsidies, however, the vehicle
must be domestically produced. Imported EVs are subject to high import
tariffs.

Foreign automakers who want to produce cars to sell in China must do so
through a joint venture with a Chinese automaker anyway. That rule was
introduced to allow the Chinese companies to access advanced technology.
Now, as Russo pointed out, that has been extended to electric vehicle
technology.

So Nissan, after some hesitation, will now produce a Chinese version of the
LEAF through the Venucia brand, a local brand produced only in China through
its JV with Dongfeng, with whom Nissan also produces regular gas-powered
vehicles. BMW is doing the same, producing a EV under a local brand, Zinoro,
with its partner Brilliance. Daimler does not produce non-electric passenger
vehicles with BYD; the Denza joint venture was formed in 2010 specifically
to produce electric vehicles.

Chinese version of Nissan LEAF

The complication with all these joint venture EV launches, said Russo, “is
it will only add more competition for the independent carmakers who are
trying to develop their own EV products.” That includes BYD and Geely, as
well as SUV maker Zhongtai (aka Zotye). The joint venture models will also
compete with electric vehicles launched by the state-owned partners, most of
whom have launched their own electric vehicles. For example, Dongfeng has
showed its own brand EV at other auto shows in China.

For Appearances Only

Whether the local automakers expect to actually sell any of their EVs to
Chinese consumers in the near term is a question, however. Supplier sources
in China say that much of the activity is more show than substance. And
after enthusiastically introducing electric vehicles of at auto shows in
China the past few years, at the Guangzhou show this year “most of the local
EV products are no longer front and center at the auto show stands,” said
Russo.

To be sure, Chinese consumers are generally more interested in buying cars
with a foreign badge, assuming that will mean a higher-quality product. But
they haven’t been enthusiastic about buying electric vehicles of any brand.

So just having some foreign automaker DNA won’t make EVs much more alluring
to Chinese consumers, Yale Zhang, principal at consultancy Auto Foresight in
Shanghai told PluginCars.com. “It does not matter who produces EVs, the
sales volume will be limited,” he said.
[© plugincars.com]




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