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China Set to Dominate Electric Vehicle Battleground For Decades

China will be the main battleground for electric-car makers for the next two decades.

China Set to Dominate Electric Vehicle Battleground For Decades
A driver charges an electric taxi at a charging station operated by an electric vehicle dealership in Ningde, Fujian Province, China. (Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) -- China will be the main battleground for electric-car makers for the next two decades, seeing off advances by the U.S. and Europe, amid a government push toward greener vehicles, according to a new report by BloombergNEF.

Annual electric-car sales in the Asian country will reach 2 million units next year, after topping 1 million for the first time in 2018, according to the BNEF report released Wednesday. While China now accounts for more than half of global sales, other regions will start to catch up and its share will shrink to about 25% in 2040, the researcher said.

China Set to Dominate Electric Vehicle Battleground For Decades

China’s growth means manufacturers such as Volkswagen AG and Tesla Inc. can’t afford to lose focus on the country even as sales start to pick up in other regions. The two brands are among those planning to start EV manufacturing in China, while Nissan Motor Co. is looking for acquisition targets in the local industry. Chinese contenders such as Beijing Electric Vehicle Co. and BYD Co. are fighting to defend their home turf.

China surpassed the U.S. in 2015 to become the largest electric-car market and has kept the title since, helped by the government subsidizing purchases and spurring companies’ research efforts. The country is looking to cut back oil consumption, clear up its air and look for new ways to compete with global automobile powerhouses in Japan, Europe and North America.

Now that the industry is past its nurturing stage, the Chinese government is phasing out purchase subsidies and will eliminate them completely in 2020. That is set to weigh on demand slightly in the next two years, though strong growth will resume after that with sales set to hit 3.5 million electric cars in 2023, BNEF predicts.

Traditional internal-combustion cars will gradually give way to electric vehicles, before being overtaken. Electricity-powered cars will account for 8% of China’s passenger-vehicle sales next year, 20% in 2025 and 68% in 2040, according to the report.

Easier registration of electric cars has boosted sales in major cities, while licenses for gas guzzlers remain tightly capped. The six cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Tianjin, Hangzhou and Guangzhou accounted for about 35% of passenger electric vehicles sold in China last year, according to BNEF. Electric-vehicle sales in Shenzhen and Shanghai exceeded those in Germany and the U.K in 2018.

Sales will be further spurred by China’s new stringent rules to promote the production of greener cars, BNEF said. Major manufacturers will be punished unless they meet quotas for zero- and low-emission cars or buy credits from other companies that exceed the quotas.

Total EV production this year is set to exceed the government’s target, but most of the major global automakers aren’t generating enough credits and will have to buy them from local automakers, BNEF said.

--With assistance from Adrian Leung.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Tian Ying in Beijing at ytian@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Young-Sam Cho at ycho2@bloomberg.net, Ville Heiskanen, Angus Whitley

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg