> Fear of cheap Chinese EVs spurs automaker dash for affordable cars
>
> By Nick Carey and Paul Lienert   December 8, 2023
> https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/fear-cheap-chinese-evs-spurs-automaker-dash-affordable-cars-2023-12-08/



Electric vehicles from China recalled in Australia due to drivers facing a 
‘risk of serious injury or death’ by electrocution

BY STEVE MOLLMAN  December 8, 2023  
https://fortune.com/2023/12/07/electric-vehicles-recall-electrocution-risk-great-wall-motor-ora-australia-china/


While electric vehicles from China have yet to flood the U.S. market, American 
automakers are already worried about how they’ll compete on cost once they do.

Chinese EV brands have, however, entered other markets already, including 
Europe, Southeast Asia, and Australia and New Zealand.

But it hasn’t always gone smoothly. Great Wall China, one of the emerging EV 
makers in China that’s now expanding abroad, just issued a recall in Australia 
for an inexpensive 2023 model called the Ora, as a notice on an Australian 
government website reveals.

https://www.vehiclerecalls.gov.au/recalls/rec-005843

The notice reads, “Due to a programming issue, if the operator removes the 
charging cable without cancelling the charge, an electrical arc between the 
charging plug and the vehicle may occur.”

How serious is the risk from this “electrical arc” or electrocution? Quite, it 
appears.

“If an electrical arc comes into contact with the operator or bystanders it 
will increase the risk of serious injury or death,” the notice continues.

Ora owners will be notified in writing and asked to bring their vehicle into a 
dealership, which will fix the issue for free with a software update, the 
notice says.


The recall notice applies to 1,659 vehicles sold Down Under. A recall is also 
hitting New Zealand, a GWC national sales manager told EVs & Beyond, with about 
520 vehicles affected there. (There may be recalls in other markets that 
Fortune has not yet learned of.)

Of course, recalls have hit Tesla in the U.S. as well. Earlier this year, Elon 
Musk’s EV maker “recalled” more than 362,000 vehicles with the Full 
Self-Driving Beta because it “may cause crashes,” according to the National 
Highway Traffic Safety Administration. (The fix involved over-the-air software 
updates, and Musk takes issue with the word “recall” for such cases as it 
implies a need to visit a garage.)

Drive, an Australian car news publication, reported in July that the Ora sold 
for about US$26,400, but that two EVs from other Chinese carmakers sold for 
slightly less: MG’s MG 4 and BYD’s Dolphin.

Disruptive Chinese EVs

Even less expensive models from China could disrupt overseas markets in the 
near future. For example, BYD’s Seagull launched in China earlier this year 
with the cutthroat price of about $11,000 and has quickly become one of the 
nation’s best-selling EVs.

By comparison, in America Tesla’s most affordable option, the Model 3, starts 
at just under $40,000 and exceeds $60,000 with various add-ons, according to 
Electrek.

As the UK-based market intelligence firm Autovista Group wrote, it is overseas 
that the Seagull “could be a truly disruptive force. Latin America and Africa 
are waiting for a good quality, affordable EV to hit the mainstream. India and 
Europe could also see the Seagull take off, where decent, small, 
value-for-money BEVs are scarce.”

In May, Ford CEO Jim Farley said that “the Chinese are going to be the 
powerhouse” in EVs.

Speaking at the Morgan Stanley Sustainable Finance Summit, he said that Chinese 
brands “produce 70% of electric vehicles in the world in China…And the winners 
are BYD, Geely, Changan, SAIC, Great Wall.”

He also addressed the issue of cost, saying: “To beat them, you either have to 
have a very distinct brands, which we think we do, or you have to beat them on 
cost. But how do you beat them on cost if their scale is 5x yours?”

Chinese brands also have an advantage on the supply-chain side. BYD, for 
instance, can keep its vehicle prices low partly because it owns the supply 
chain of its EV batteries, from the raw materials to the finished battery 
packs. It also designs its own semiconductors.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has gone from laughing at the quality of BYD cars in 2011 
to saying last month that “the Chinese car companies are extremely competitive.”

At last week’s New York Times Dealbook conference, Musk suggested that the 
world’s top 10 carmakers would be Tesla and nine EV makers from China.

“If we consider different leagues of competitiveness at Tesla, we consider the 
Chinese league to be the most competitive,” he added.

But winning the trust of consumers in Europe, Australia, and other markets will 
likely prove a long challenge for China’s EV brands.

It took Japanese carmakers decades to win hearts and minds around the world. In 
a YouGov survey of German consumers last year, only 1% of those who were even 
aware of Chinese EV brands said they would consider actually buying one.

The Chinese EV maker Aiways, meanwhile, recently told Reuters that it decided 
against advertising its national heritage due to worries that consumers would 
hesitate to buy China-made products.

Alarming recalls like the Ora’s won’t help.

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